Peace River (Canada)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peace River
Peace River watershed in western Canada
Peace River watershed in western Canada
Origin Finlay River
Mouth Slave River
Basin countries Canada
Length 1,923 km
Source elevation 671 m (mouth of Finlay River)
1,200 m (Finlay headwater)
Mouth elevation 213 m
Avg. discharge 68,200,000 dam³/year
Basin area 302,500 km²

The Peace River (French: rivière de la Paix) is a river in Canada that originates in the Rocky Mountains of northern British Columbia and flows through northern Alberta.

Contents

[edit] History

The regions along the river are the traditional home of the Dunne-za or Beaver people. The fur trader Peter Pond is believed to have visited the river in 1785. A fur trading post was established by Charles Boyer of the North West Company in 1788 at the river's junction with the Boyer River.

In 1792 and 1793, the explorer Alexander Mackenzie travelled up the river to the Continental Divide.[1] Mackenzie referred to the river as "Unjegah", from a native word meaning "large river". The Peace River, or Unchaga or Unjaja, was named after Peace Point near Lake Athabasca, where the Treaty of the Peace came authorized with the smoking of a peace pipe. The treaty ended the decades of hostilities between the Beaver (Athapascan branch) and the Cree in which the Cree dominated the Beaver until a smallpox epidemic in 1781 decimated the Cree. The treaty made the Beaver stay north of the river and the Cree south.[2]

In 1794, a fur trading post was built on the Peace River at Rocky Mountain House, near the current site of Fort St. John, which was the first non-native settlement on the British Columbia mainland.

The rich soils of the Peace River valley in Alberta have been producing wheat crops since the late 19th century. The Peace River region is also an important centre of oil and natural gas production. There are also lumber and pulp and paper plants along the river in British Columbia.

[edit] Geography

[edit] Course

This river is 1,923 km long (from the head of Finlay River to Lake Athabasca). It drains an area of approximately 302,500 km².[3] At Peace Point, where it drains in the Slave River, it has an annual dischage of 68,200,000 dam³.[4]

A large man-made lake, Williston Lake, has been formed on the upper river by the construction of the W. A. C. Bennett Dam for hydroelectric power generation. After the dam, the river then flows east into Alberta and then continues north and east and into the Peace-Athabasca Delta in Wood Buffalo National Park, at the western end of Lake Athabasca. Water from the delta flows into the Slave River east of Peace Point and reaches the Arctic Ocean via the Great Slave Lake and Mackenzie River.

[edit] Communities

Peace River at Taylor
Enlarge
Peace River at Taylor

Communities located directly on the river include:

Many provincial parks and wildland reserves are established on the river, such as Butler Ridge Provincial Park, Taylor Landing Provincial Park, Beatton River Provincial Park, Peace River Corridor Provincial Park in British Columbia and Dunvegan Provincial Park, Dunvegan West Wildland, Peace River Wildland, Greene Valley Provincial Park, Notikewin Provincial Park, Wood Buffalo National Park in Alberta.

A few indian reserves are also located on the river banks, among them Beaver Ranch 163, John D'Or Prairie 215, Fox Lake 162, Peace Point 222 and Devil's Gate 220.

[edit] Tributaries

Tributaries of the Peace River include:

Williston Lake

British Columbia

  • Farrell Creek
  • Halfway River
  • Moberly River
  • Pine River
  • Beatton River
  • Kiskatinaw River
  • Alces River

Alberta

  • Pouce Coupe River
  • Clear River
  • Montagneuse River
  • Hamelin Creek
  • Ksituan River
  • Hines Creek
  • Saddle River
  • Smoky River
  • Heart River
  • Whitemud River
  • Cadotte River
  • Notikewin River
  • Wolverine River
  • Buffalo River
  • Keg River
  • Boyer River
  • Caribou River
  • Wabasca River
  • Mikkwa River
  • Wentzel River
  • Jackfish River

Lake Claire

  • Birch River
  • McIvor River
  • Baril Lake
  • Mamawi Lake

[edit] References

  1. ^ Peace River. (2006). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved September 12, 2006, from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service
  2. ^ Coutts, M. E. (1958). Dawson Creek: Past and Present, An Historical Sketch. Edmonton: Dawson Creek Historical Society.
  3. ^ Atlas of Canada - Rivers in Canda
  4. ^ Alberta Environment - Alberta river basins