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Battle River

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- location
  
Alberta

- elevation
  
463 m (1,519 ft)

Basin area
  
30,300 km²

Source
  
Battle Lake

Mouth
  
North Saskatchewan River

- elevation
  
849 m (2,785 ft)

- average
  
10 m/s (353 cu ft/s)

Length
  
570 km

Province
  
Saskatchewan

Bridges
  
Fabyan Trestle Bridge

Battle River httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

- location
  
Battleford, Saskatchewan

Cities
  
Camrose, Wainwright, Ponoka, Wetaskiwin, Forestburg

Jet boating on saskatchewan battle river


Battle River is a river in central Alberta and western Saskatchewan. It is a major tributary of the North Saskatchewan River.

Contents

The Battle River flows for 570 kilometres (350 mi) and has a total drainage area of 30,300 square kilometres (11,700 sq mi). The mean discharge is 10 m³/s at its mouth.

Battle river rapids


History

The river did not gain its current name until relatively recently. When Anthony Henday passed through the region in the 1750s, he did not mention a river with this name. But by 1793 Peter Fidler mentions arriving at the "Battle or Fighting River", likely so named because of the beginning of a period of rivalry between the Iron Confederacy (Cree and Assiniboine) and the Blackfoot Confederacy.

Course

The headwaters of Battle River is Battle Lake in west-central Alberta, east of Winfield. The river meanders through Alberta eastward into Saskatchewan, where it discharges into the North Saskatchewan River at Battleford. Over its course, the river flows through Ponoka and by Hardisty and Fabyan within Alberta. Big Knife Provincial Park is situation on the south bank of the river west of Highway 855, approximately 15 km (9.3 mi) southwest of Forestburg. The Fabyan Trestle Bridge crosses the river.

Tributaries

  • Sunny Creek
  • Wolf Creek
  • Pigeon Lake Creek
  • Stoney Creek
  • Pipestone Creek
  • Driedmeat Creek
  • Meeting Creek
  • Paintearth Creek
  • Castor Creek
  • Iron Creek
  • Ribstone Creek
  • Battle Lake, Samson Lake, Driedmeat Lake and Big Knife Lake are formed along the river, and numerous other lakes (such as Pigeon Lake, Coal Lake, Bittern Lake, Vernon Lake, Ernest Lake, Soda Lake) lie in the Battle River hydrographic basin.

    References

    Battle River Wikipedia