Cormorant Lake (Manitoba)

Cormorant Lake is a large lake in northern Manitoba, Canada. Administratively it is in Division 21, Northern Region of Manitoba, and almost entirely within the Cormorant Provincial Forest. The lake is about 21.15 kilometres (13 mi) wide and 64.23 kilometres (40 mi) long, with a surface area of over a 1,000 square kilometres (386 sq mi). There is one village and two hamlets on the east side of the lake along Via Rail's Winnipeg – Churchill rail line, the village of Cormorant[1] and the hamlets Halcrow and Dering. The Cormorant Lake Airport is between Cormorant and Dering. It is the former site of a military base. It is now closed. There is one hamlet to the south of the lake, Budd, which is also on the rail line. The lake can be reached by road on Provincial Road 287 from just north of The Pas.

Cormorant Lake (Manitoba)
Coordinates54°15′N 100°50′W
Typenatural freshwater lake
Basin countriesCanada
Max. length64.23 kilometres (39.91 mi)
Max. width21.15 kilometres (13.14 mi)
Islandsnumerous
SettlementsCormorant, Manitoba
NASA image of Cormorant Lake northeast of The Pas

Cormorant Lake is in the Saskatchewan River basin[2] and is primarily fed from the northeast from Mitchell Lake and Yawningstone Lake, and from the Southwest from Clearwater Lake and exits to the southeast into Moose Lake. There are two large islands in the western portion of the lake, and a chain of islands cutting northeast–southwest across the middle of the lake.[1]

Notes

  1. "Cormorant, Manitoba". Community Council of Cormorant. Archived from the original on 9 November 2010. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  2. "Manitoba Basins and watershed boundaries". Conservation and Water Stewardship, Government of Manitoba.



gollark: Minoteaur 1 and 6 are publicly available.
gollark: I have not bothered to publicly release it yet.
gollark: The main issue is that the rest of the stuff I have to implement is kind of boring but there are vast quantities of it.
gollark: Although technically the present one is Minoteaur 7.1, not 7, they're both pythonous.
gollark: Not particularly.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.