Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Nottaway River

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- location
  
Matagami

Length
  
225 km

Discharge
  
1,190 m³/s

Mouth
  
James Bay

Province
  
Québec

- elevation
  
0 m (0 ft)

Basin area
  
65,800 km²

Source
  
Lake Matagami

Country
  
Canada

Nottaway River httpsiytimgcomvibYpuf6nAau4hqdefaultjpg

- location
  
About 17 km SW of Waskaganish

- average
  
1,190 m/s (42,020 cu ft/s)

The Nottaway River is a river in Quebec, Canada. The river drains Lake Matagami and travels 225 kilometers (140 mi) north-west before emptying into Rupert Bay at the south end of James Bay. Its drainage basin is 65,800 square kilometers (25,400 sq mi) and has a mean discharge of 1190 m³/s (1556 yd³/s). Its source is the head of the Mégiscane River, which is 776 kilometers (482 mi) from the mouth.

Contents

Significant lakes along its course are Soscumica Lake (50°15′N 77°27′W) and Dusaux Lake (50°45′00″N 77°53′30″W).

The Nottaway, together with the Broadback and Rupert Rivers, was initially considered to be dammed and developed as part of the James Bay Project. But in 1972 hydro-electric development began on the more northerly La Grande and Eastmain Rivers, and the NBR Project was shelved. With the decision to divert the Rupert River to the La Grande, it is not likely that the Nottaway will be developed in the foreseeable future.

Nottaway river


ToponymyEdit

In the seventeenth century, the Iroquois invaded the Algonquin territory near James Bay along this river. So when European cartographers started to map the river in the late seventeenth century, they called it "Rivière des Iroquois" (Iroquois River), as shown on maps of Jean-Baptiste-Louis Franquelin in 1699, Guillaume Delisle in 1703, and Jacques-Nicolas Bellin in 1744.

Yet various forms of "Nottaway" started to appear in the early 18th century. "Noddaways" in 1715, "Nodaway" in 1743, "Nodaoay" and "Nodway" in 1744. Geologists James Richardson and Albert Peter Low used "Notaway River" in their reports (of 1880 and 1885 respectively). The current spelling "Nottaway" was established in the early twentieth century. It is believed to have come from the Algonquin word nadowe, meaning "snake" and which the Algonquin tribes used to identify or describe their enemies, including the Iroquois. The Cree called this river Natuweu Nipi, and the Iroquois name was Nottaweou.

TributariesEdit

Major tributaries of the Nottaway River include:

  • Kitchigama River
  • Lake Matagami
  • Allard River
  • Bell River
  • Rivière Laflamme
  • Rivière Mégiscane
  • Waswanipi River
  • Chibougamau River
  • Opawica River
  • References

    Nottaway River Wikipedia