Des Quinze Lake
Des Quinze Lake | ||
---|---|---|
Primary inflows Ottawa River, Little Roger River, Fraser River (Ottawa River), McFadden River | | |
Primary outflows | Ottawa River | |
Basin countries | Canada | |
Max. length | 52 km (32 mi) | |
Max. width | 11 km (6.8 mi) | |
Surface area | 145 km2 (56 sq mi) | |
Surface elevation | 258 m (846 ft) | |
Islands | Morris (facing Allard Bay), Du Chenal Blind (near the dam of Laverlochère-Angliers), Frigon, Fox, Jumelles, Squelette (facing Sèche Bay) |
The Lac des Quinze is a freshwater body extending into the municipalities of
.Geography
Covering 145 kilometres (90.10 mi) and forming a large open crescent to the North, "Lac des Quinze" is a major expansion of the
In addition, "Lac des Quinze" is powered by:
- South side: the Fraser River that flows into Gillies Bay, one of many bays created by the particular configuration of the water body;
- East side: McFadden River (coming from the South) draining the waters of Rondelet Lake and Béquille Creek;
- North side: the outlet of lakes Lébret, Rocher, Martin, Petit lac Perreault, Beaumesnil Lake, Klock and Wasps; the waters of the Little Roger River which drains the lakes Beaudry lake, Gérin-Lajoie, Gaboury and the Langelier; discharge of a series of lakes located north of the village of Rémigny, Quebec.
After crossing the "Lac des Quinze", the current of the
The municipalities administering the territory of "Lac des Quinze" are:
Toponymy
A March 1868 survey report by Lindsay Russell reports the "Lac des Quinze". The origin of the name of the lake and the "Des Quinze River" is explained in another survey report dated May 1873 by Walter McOuat, who writes that he "went up the Ottawa to "Lac des Quinze", a distance of about fifteen miles (24 km),... This part of the Outaouais is designated in the locality under the name "Les Quinze", which comes from the fact that, to go up in a canoe, it is necessary to make about fifteen portages "(corresponding to as many cascades or falls).
In the middle of the 19th century, logging in the "Lac des Quinze" sector began at the initiative of logging companies. Between 1884 and 1910, several settlers gradually settled on the south shore of "Lac des Quinze". In 1883, John Morrison, a former employee of the Hudson's Bay Company, built a trading post at Gillies Bay (South of "Lac des Quinze") to trade furs with the Amerindians for others products.
Around 1912, a hydroelectric dam was built on the Ottawa River, at the outlet of Lake Quinze. In 1947, this barrage of "Des Quinze" (English: the Fifteen) will then be raised and three other dams, with power stations, will appear downstream.[1]
The toponym "Lac des Quinze" (in French) was formalized on December 5, 1968, at the Bank of Place Names of the Commission de toponymie du Québec.[2]
See also
- Ottawa River, a watercourse
- Little Roger River, a watercourse
- McFadden River, a watercourse
- Fraser River (Ottawa River), a watercourse
- Lac Simard (Temiscamingue), a body of water
- Grassy Lake (Témiscamingue), a body of water
- Lake Timiskaming, a body of water
- Rémigny Lake, a body of water
- Centrale des Rapides-des-Quinze, a hydroelectric power station
- Biodiversity Reserve of Lake des Quinze
- Laverlochère-Angliers, a municipality
- Moffet, Quebec, a municipality
- Latulipe-et-Gaboury, Quebec, a municipality
- Guérin, Quebec, a municipality
- Rémigny, Quebec, a municipality
- List of lakes in Canada
References
- ^ Source: "Names and places of Quebec", a work of the Commission de toponymie du Québec, published in 1994 and 1996 under the form of a printed illustrated dictionary, and under that of a CD-ROM produced by the company Micro-Intel, in 1997, from this dictionary.
- ^ Commission de toponymie du Quebec - Bank of Place Names - Toponym: "Lac Des-Quinze"