Wapizagonke Lake Explained

Lake Wapizagonke
Other Name:Lac Wapizagonke
Location:Mauricie region, north of Shawinigan, Quebec
Coords:46.7227°N -73.0333°W
Type:natural
Pushpin Map:Quebec
Outflow:Shawinigan River
Catchment:St. Lawrence River
Basin Countries:Canada
Length:9.2km (05.7miles)
Cities:Shawinigan

The Wapizagonke Lake is one of the bodies of water located the sector "Lac-Wapizagonke", in the city of Shawinigan, in the La Mauricie National Park, in the region of Mauricie, in Quebec, in Canada.

Geography

With a length of 9.2 kilometers, the Wapizagonke lake is located near the west boundary of La Mauricie National Park in northern Shawinigan. Surrounded by mountains, this lake is a narrow shape and length is in the north–south axis. It drains through its southern end into the Shawinigan River, which flows eastward and then south to empty into the Saint-Maurice River.

Major lakes feeding the Wapizagonke Lake watershed are: Reid, Houle, Jodon, Anticagamac and Avalon.

Toponymy

The lake appears on the cards in 1852 under the name "Lake Pisagunk". Forestry workers identified him rather as the "lake Mistagance". Wapizagonke appear on the map in 1925 and is a variation of Ouapitagone in Montagnais, which meant according to Father Joseph-Étienne Guinard (1864-1965): "kind of very rare duck species". In Abenaki, the lake is named Wawibizagak and means "surrounded by the bush". Certain visitors named the lake under two names: "Island Lake" and "Lake Croche".[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Commission de toponymie du Québec (Québec Toponymy Board) - Bank of place names - Lake Wapizagonke. October 8, 2012.