Pouce Coupe River Explained

Pouce Coupe River
Source1 Location:Saddle Hills County, Alberta
Mouth Coordinates:56.1316°N -119.9112°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Source1 Elevation:860m (2,820feet)
Mouth Elevation:380m (1,250feet)

The Pouce Coupe River is a major tributary of the Peace River in Alberta and British Columbia, Canada. Its name is officially spelled Pouce Coupé River,[1] but it is commonly written without the acute accent.

Originating in Alberta's Saddle Hills County, it flows into British Columbia's Peace River Regional District, then returns in Alberta in Saddle Hill County, where it empties into the Peace River.

The region of Pouce Coupe Prairie, from which the river and village of Pouce Coupe take their names, was called that for a Beaver Indian Chief named 'Pouscapee'. The first European settler in the region was Hector Tremblay, who built a cabin there in 1898. Tremblay, of French origin, translated 'Pouskapee's Prairie' into the nearest French words of similar sound (French: pouce coupé, meaning "cut thumb" or "cut-off thumb").

Course

The Pouce Coupe originates in a small lake in northern Alberta, at an elevation of 860m (2,820feet), in the Pouce Coupe Prairie of the southern Peace River Country, west of Spirit River and Woking, between Saddle Hills and Blueberry Hill. It flows west and receives the waters of Boone Creek before reaching the British Columbia–Alberta border.

The river then turns northwest to the village of Pouce Coupe. The Pouce Coupe Regional Park is established on the banks of the river east of the village and Highway2, at the confluence with Bissette Creek.[2]

It receives the waters of Dawson Creek east of the city of Dawson Creek, then turns northeast, entering once again the province of Alberta, north of Highway 49. The course runs through a canyon that reaches depths of 220m (720feet) in this section. Ammonite fossils harvested from the geological formations opened in the canyon can be found in the Dawson Creek Northern Alberta Railways Park museum. The river continues north and empties into the Peace River, south of Highway 64, at an elevation of 380m (1,250feet).

Tributaries and crossings

From its origin to its mouth, Pouce Coupe River encounters the following tributaries and crossings:

Tributary/crossingsLocationRemarks
Unnamed Lake55.6706°N -119.3484°WOrigin
Forestry Road55.6759°N -119.6863°WBridge
Boone CreekFrom South, left tributary
Tupper RiverFrom South, left tributary
British Columbia border
Bissette CreekFrom West, left tributary
Pouce Coupe Regional ParkCamping
Briar Ridge RoadBridge
Dawson CreekFrom West, left tributary
Highway 49Bridge
Henderson CreekFrom East, right tributary
Landry RoadBridge
Saskatoon CreekFrom West, left tributary
Alberta border
Doe CreekFrom West, left tributary
Broche CreekFrom East, right tributary
56.1316°N -119.9112°WMouth

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pouce Coupé River. Querying Canadian Geographical Names. Natural Resources Canada. 1 May 2014.
  2. Web site: Pouce Coupe. Northern BC Tourism. 2008-02-18. dead. https://archive.today/20050111182052/http://www.nbctourism.com/communities/Pouce_Coupe. 2005-01-11.