Arnaud River

Arnaud River
Rivière Arnaud, Payne River
Payne Bay and mouth of the Arnaud River. Kangirsuk is faintly visible on the north (left) shore.
Country Canada
Province Quebec
Region Nunavik
Mouth Ungava Bay
 - coordinates 59°58′55″N 69°45′31″W / 59.98194°N 69.75861°W / 59.98194; -69.75861Coordinates: 59°58′55″N 69°45′31″W / 59.98194°N 69.75861°W / 59.98194; -69.75861 [1]
Length 377 km (234 mi) [2]
Basin 49,500 km2 (19,100 sq mi) [2]
Discharge
 - average 670 m3/s (23,661 cu ft/s) [2]

The Arnaud River (formerly known as the Payne River) is a river in Nunavik, Quebec, Canada, flowing from the low plateaux of the Ungava Peninsula through a series of glacial lakes to Ungava Bay. Its mean discharge is approximately 15 km³ per year, but the river flows only in the summer as it is frozen to several metres for the rest of the year. The total length of the river is about 377 kilometres, but there are several main channels in the upper reaches of the river, most of them unnamed and hardly sighted even by the native Inuit.

The Inuit village of Kangirsuk lies near the mouth of the Arnaud River on the north shore of Payne Bay, 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) inland from the western coast of Ungava Bay. About 22 kilometres (14 mi) upstream from Kangirsuk is the Hammer of Thor archaeological site.

Most of the basin is almost totally barren owing to the harsh climate - the mean temperature is only about 7 °C (45 °F) even at the height of summer and continuous permafrost extends deep from only half a metre below the surface. The only vegetation is low shrubs at the lower levels, for no trees grow within the Arnaud basin even in the most sheltered sites, and the river freezes for too long to make hydroelectric development feasible.

The basin of the Arnaud River, though intensely glaciated for almost the whole of the Quaternary - ice sheets are known to have been thicker over the basin at the Last Glacial Maximum than they are over Antarctica today - is the site of a major meteorite impact about a million years ago that has been surprisingly well preserved, probably because the exposed surface rocks are exceedingly old and the meteorite might have been deposited in such a way as to ensure preservation during the long glaciations.

Payne River at Kangirsuk

References

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