Damville Lake

Damville Lake is a freshwater body of the Rivière-Mistassini, unorganized territory of the Maria-Chapdelaine Regional County Municipality, north-west of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean administrative region, in province of Quebec, Canada.

Damville Lake
LocationRivière-Mistassini, Maria-Chapdelaine Regional County Municipality (RCM), Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec, Canada
Coordinates49°07′27″N 73°05′22″W
TypeNatural
Primary inflows
  • (clockwise from the mouth)
  • 2 streams
  • outlet of a set of 6 lakes
  • outlet of Lac du Brochet
  • outlet of two lakes: Clair and Long
  • outlet of Lac du Chien
  • outlet of Lac aux Quenouilles
  • outlet of a set of lakes
  • outlet of Lac au Canard
  • stream
Primary outflowsNormandin River
Basin countriesCanada
Max. length7.0 kilometres (4.3 mi)
Max. width2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi)
Surface elevation282 metres (925 ft)

Forestry is the main economic activity of the sector. Recreational tourism activities come second.[1]

Some secondary forest roads serve the vicinity of the lake; these forest roads are mainly attached to the forest road R0202 which runs along the west shore of the lake.[1]

Geography

This lake has a length of 7.0 km (4.3 mi) oriented north-west, a maximum width of 2.5 km (1.6 mi) and an altitude of 282 m (925 ft). The "Black Spruce Mountain" is located on the east side of the lake. A peninsula attached to the east bank stretches for 1.1 km (0.68 mi) to the northwest. This lake has seven large bays. This lake is mainly fed by a stream (coming from the north), by the outlet (coming from the north) from Clair, Long and Éric lakes, as well as the outlet (coming from the southeast) from several lakes.

The mouth of Lake Damville is located at:

  • 0.5 kilometres (0.31 mi) north-east of the forest road R0202;
  • 1.7 kilometres (1.1 mi) north-east of the course of Ashuapmushuan River;
  • 74.3 kilometres (46.2 mi) north-eaest of down-town of Saint-Félicien.[1]

The main hydrographic slopes near Lake Damville are:

From the mouth of Damville Lake (located at the bottom of the north-west bay of the lake), the current crosses an extension of 1.8 km (1.1 mi) of the lake; then descends the course of the rivière aux Brochets on 0.9 km (0.56 mi) toward south-west; descends the Ashuapmushuan River on 100.4 km (62.4 mi), the current crosses Lac Saint-Jean east on 41.1 km (25.5 mi) (its full length), follows the course of the Saguenay River via the Petite Décharge on 172.3 km (107.1 mi) east to Tadoussac where it merges with the Estuary of Saint Lawrence.[1]

Toponymy

The term "Damville" refers to an old French commune in the Eure department in the Normandy region.

The toponym "Lac Ashuapmushuan" was formalized on June 18, 1993, by the Commission de toponymie du Québec.[2]

gollark: I mean, I'd prefer it *not* die. It's a siyat.
gollark: Wait, you need to get it *that* accurately? Timing my experiment is going to be !!FUN!!.
gollark: *oopsles*
gollark: AP times are down, interestingly; due to the hypothetical release?
gollark: AP just gave me a free purple nebula!

See also

  • List of lakes in Canada

Notes and references

  1. Distances measured from the Atlas of Canada (published on the Internet) of the Department of Natural Resources Canada.
  2. Commission de toponymie du Quebec - List of Place Names - Toponym: "Damville Lake"
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