Puskwaskau River

Puskwaskau River
Origin Puskwaskau Lake
55°16′44″N 117°39′09″W / 55.27887°N 117.65259°W / 55.27887; -117.65259 (Puskwaskau Lake)
Mouth Smoky River
55°29′03″N 118°09′23″E / 55.48403°N 118.15646°E / 55.48403; 118.15646 (Puskwaskau River mouth)
Basin countries  Canada
Source elevation 715 meters (2,346 ft)
Mouth elevation 440 meters (1,440 ft)

The Puskwaskau River is a short river in Northern Alberta, Canada. It is a tributary of the Smoky River flowing westwards in the Peace River Country. Its waters flow through the Smoky River, Peace River, Slave River, Great Slave Lake and Mackenzie River into the Arctic Ocean.

The name of the river originates from the Cree word for short grass.[1] The Puskwaskau Formation, a stratigraphical unit of the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin, was named for the river.

Course

The river originates from the Puskwaskau Lake in the Sturgeon Heights, at an elevation of 715 meters (2,346 ft), north-west from Valleyview. It flows north-west and receives the waters of Little Puskwaskau River before being crossed by Highway 676. It continues flowing in a western direction through a 150 meters (490 ft) deep canyon before it empties in the Smoky River, west of Teepee Creek, at an elevation of 440 meters (1,440 ft), 40 kilometers (25 mi) west of its origin.

Tributaries

See also

References

  1. Alberta Land Surveyor History. "Place names". Retrieved 2010-08-18.
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