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Wawiag River

Coordinates: 48°25′06″N 91°07′07″W / 48.4183°N 91.1186°W / 48.4183; -91.1186
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wawiag River is a river in Ontario, Canada, that is fed by Mack Creek and Greenwood Creek.

Description

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Wawiag River is a glacial river[1] fed by Halet Lake,[2]: 146  Burchell Lake, Mack Creek and Greenwood Creek and flows into Kawnipi Lake.[1]

Wildlife

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Wildlife on the river includes moose, cougars, wolverines, mooneye, whitefish, walleye, kingbirds, tree swallows, white-winged crossbills, rose-breasted grosbeaks, evening grosbeaks, Cape May warblers, great grey owls and hawk owls. Wild rice grows in the river, and edible berries grow around it.[1]

History and nomenclature

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Indigenous peoples have lived around the river's mouth for generations, partly due to the location being a good hunting grounds for caribou. In 1890 the river was known in Ojibwe as Kahwawiagamak River (Gaa-waawiyaagamaag-ziibi), meaning "the round lake's river".[1] There was an 5,948 acres (2,407 ha)[3] Ojibwe reserve at the river mouth, known as the Sturgeon Lake Indian Reserve 24C, created in 1877 and disestablished in 1915.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Nelson, J. (2009). Quetico: Near to Nature's Heart. Canada: Dundurn Press.
  2. ^ 58th Annual Meeting, Institute of Lake Superior Geology, Thunder Bay, Ontario, May16-20 2021, Part 2 - Field Trip Guidebook Archived 2022-01-22 at the Wayback Machine, Institute of Lake Superior Geology
  3. ^ Stadfeld, Bruce (1993). "Aboriginal Resource Use in Canada: Historical and Legal Aspects, Edited by Kerry Abel and Jean Friesen, Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 1991, vii + 343 pp". Canadian Journal of Law and Society. 8 (1): 263–267. doi:10.1017/s0829320100003069. ISSN 0829-3201. S2CID 147038400. Archived from the original on 2023-07-03. Retrieved 2023-07-02.

48°25′06″N 91°07′07″W / 48.4183°N 91.1186°W / 48.4183; -91.1186