Little Mékinac North River

The Little Mékinac North River flows from North to South, in three municipalities (Sainte-Thècle, Grandes-Piles and Saint-Tite), in the region of Middle Mauricie, in administrative region of Mauricie, in Quebec, in Canada.

Little Mékinac North River
Location
CountryCanada
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationGrandes-Piles
  coordinates46.73528°N 72.61056°W / 46.73528; -72.61056
  elevation302 m (991 ft)
Mouth 
  location
Rivière des Envies at Saint-Tite
  elevation
131 m (430 ft)
Length28 km (17 mi)

Geography

With a total length of 28 km, the Little Mekinac North River has two major segments:

Northern section of the river

19 km along the northern segment of the river has its source in "3rd Lake Champlain" in Sainte-Thècle, whose waters flow southward subsequently in the second lake, then the first Lake Champlain. The course of the river continues south, crossing lakes Cobb-Dorval (2.4 km from the mouth of the next lake), Pelard (2.8 km from the mouth of the small lake Dorval), "à Pierre" and the small lake Dorval [located 3 km from Lake Roberge (Grandes-Piles)]. At the south of Lake Cobb-Dorval, the river receive another discharge from the west which pours the waters of lakes Embryo "du canard" and Button. In front of Nicolas lake, the river receives on the east side, the outlet of Lake Fontaine (Grandes-Piles). Finally, the river flows into a small lake at the north-west of Lake Roberge (Grandes-Piles.) This small lake also receives the waters of the second Lake Roberge which the discharge flows to the southeast.[1]

South-East segment of the river

Very elongated and narrow form, Lake Roberge (Grandes-Piles) is 3.4 km long. It is located between two mountain ranges in the territory of Grandes-Piles. From the mouth of Lake Roberge (Grandes-Piles) (located at the south end of the lake), the "Little Mekinac North River" flows South-East on 6.1 km (relatively in straight line, except for a few curves) at the limit of Saint-Tite. This segment of its river is mostly in mountainous and forested land. From the boundary between Grandes-Piles and Saint-Tite, the river becomes very winding across farmland in "North Mekinac River Row" and "North Rivière des Envies Row". The distance between the mouth of Lake Roberge (Grandes-Piles) and:

  • the mouth of the "little Mekinac north river" is 5.5 km (by road);
  • the intersection of routes 153 and 159 (at Saint-Tite), is 8.4 km (by road).

Before emptying into the Rivière des Envies in Saint-Tite, "Little Mékinac North River" receives the waters of the "river Mekinac South" (popularly designated "little river south Mekinac").

Toponymy

The toponym "Little Mékinac North River" was registered on December 5, 1968 in the "Bank of place names" of Commission de toponymie du Québec.[2]

gollark: And, as I said, the sky is generally empty.
gollark: Meaning they have more freedom to go around problems.
gollark: Probably just through having central control.
gollark: There might be some difficulties with doing routing in busy areas without central control, but I think you could manage it with enough effort.
gollark: If it's good enough, yes, which it should be for planes.

See also

References

  1. Geographical audit realized by historian Gaétan Veillette (Saint-Hubert, QC) on January 19, 2014, using website Google Map.
  2. "Commission de toponymie du Québec - Bank of name places".
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