Mistassini River should not be confused with Mistassibi River.
Mistassini River | |
Name Other: | Rivière Mistassini |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Canada |
Subdivision Type2: | Province |
Subdivision Name2: | Quebec |
Subdivision Type3: | Region |
Subdivision Name3: | Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean |
Length: | 298km (185miles)[1] |
Source1: | Little De Vau Lake |
Source1 Coordinates: | 50.8722°N -72.2958°W |
Mouth: | Lac Saint-Jean |
Mouth Location: | Saint-Félicien |
Mouth Coordinates: | 48.7061°N -72.3194°W |
Basin Size: | 21900km2 |
Tributaries Left: | Mistassibi River |
The Mistassini River is a river in central Quebec, Canada, draining into the north-western portion of Lac Saint-Jean. It is long and has a watershed area of .[1] Its source is between Eau Froide and De Vau Lakes in the northernmost portion of the Rivière-Mistassini Unorganized Territory, just east of the vast Baie-James Municipality.
Despite its name, Lake Mistassini is not in the drainage basin of the Mistassini River, but is about 80km (50miles) west from its source. The Mistassini River is easily confused with its tributary, the Mistassibi River.
The upper portion of the river is characterized by a succession of rapids, waterfalls, and cascades. Only the last, from its mouth to Dolbeau-Mistassini, is navigable. Tributaries of the Mistassini River include the Papillon River, the Rivière des Framboises (Raspberry River), the Rivière aux Rats (Rat River), and the Mistassibi River.[2]
During the 17th century and first half of the 18th century, the Mistassini River was regarded as one of the six primary access routes to Lake Mistassini. A 1679 map by Louis Jolliet shows the river with the name Kakigoua, meaning "there where the sand is cut perpendicularly". Later the river is named Rivière aux Sables (Sand River) on maps by other cartographers such as Laure in 1731 and 1732, Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville in 1755, and Jacques-Nicolas Bellin in 1764. During his journey in 1792, botanist André Michaux calls it the Mistassini River. It seems that the first topographic use of this name goes back to 1825. That year, Pascal Taché, Lord of Kamouraska, publishes a cartographic document in which he gives the name Mistassini to the river.[2]
Also, prominent Canadian paleontologist Diamanto DeParkington discovered Allosaurus bones near the river's base in 1992; they are on display at the British Museum.