Rabbit Creek (Nipissing District) Explained

Rabbit Creek
Pushpin Map:Canada Ontario
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of the mouth of Rabbit Creek in Ontario
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Canada
Subdivision Type2:Province
Subdivision Name2:Ontario
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:Northeastern Ontario
Subdivision Type4:District
Subdivision Name4:Nipissing
Subdivision Type5:Municipality
Subdivision Name5:Temagami
Source1:Unnamed pond
Source1 Elevation:324m (1,063feet)
Mouth:Rabbit Lake
Mouth Elevation:290m (950feet)
River System:Ottawa River drainage basin
Tributaries Right:Angus Creek

Rabbit Creek is a stream in the municipality of Temagami, Nipissing District, Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It is in the Ottawa River drainage basin and originates from an unnamed pond north of Christy Lake in geographic Law Township. From there it flows north then turns east to North Milne Lake. It heads northeast under Highway 11 to an unnamed lake, passes into geographic Askin Township, reaches Hornet Lake and takes in the right tributary Angus Creek where it travels along the Ontario Northland Railway to its mouth at Rabbit Lake. Rabbit Lake flows via the Matabitchuan River and Lake Timiskaming to the Ottawa River.[1]

A train derailment occurred along the Ontario Northland Railway at Mileage 63.4 on 14 March, 2000. The accident involved 17 cars that rolled down an embankment, two of which were leaking sulfuric acid. The possibility that some of the toxic acid made its way into Rabbit Creek prompted Ontario Northland to dump gravel into the creek as an attempt to constrain the flow of the acid.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CLAIMaps IV. Ontario Ministry of Northern Development and Mines. 2016. 2017-12-25. 2018-07-22. https://web.archive.org/web/20180722231206/http://www.gisapplication.lrc.gov.on.ca/CLAIMaps/Index.html?site=CLAIMaps&viewer=CLAIMaps&locale=en-US. live.
  2. Web site: Freight train derails in northern Ontario. CBC News. 2000. 2017-12-25. 2022-10-22. https://web.archive.org/web/20221022154221/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/freight-train-derails-in-northern-ontario-1.236535. live.