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Kipabiskau Lake, [1] which is Cree for Stoney Lake, is a narrow lake in the Canadian Province of Saskatchewan along the course of the Barrier River in the Barrier River Valley. The Barrier River is a tributary of the Red Deer River. The western half of the lake is in the RM of Pleasantdale No. 398 and the eastern half is in the RM of Barrier ...
Meewasin is the means by which the three participating parties (City of Saskatoon, Province of Saskatchewan and University of Saskatchewan) have chosen to manage their lands, through one common authority. Meewasin has statutory authority to control development in the Conservation Zone along the river valley, and does so through public committees.
In the 2016 Census of Population, the RM of Meeting Lake No. 466 recorded a population of 319 living in 138 of its 220 total private dwellings, a -15.2% change from its 2011 population of 376. With a land area of 1,066.74 km 2 (411.87 sq mi), it had a population density of 0.3/km 2 (0.8/sq mi) in 2016.
Green Lake is a long, narrow lake [6] in a glacier-carved valley east of the city of Meadow Lake. The lake's main inflow, Tea Creek, [7] enters the lake at its southern end. Tea Creek begins at Shell Lake and flows north into Green Lake. Green River, [8] Green Lake's outflow, starts at the lake's northern end and flows north into Beaver River.
Source: Statistics Canada via Saskatchewan Bureau of Statistics [6] [7] In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada , the RM of Barrier Valley No. 397 had a population of 485 living in 216 of its 375 total private dwellings, a change of 12.5% from its 2016 population of 431 .
The location of the present post-glacial river valley was created as a result of ice-marginal deposition. [1]Archaeological sites from around the area suggest that the First Nations have used the resources found in the North Saskatchewan River valley for thousands of years, and may have even modified the river valley to a certain degree. [2]
Fort Red Deer River or Fort Rivière la Biche was a North West Company trading post on the Red Deer River near the town of Hudson Bay. It was founded in 1794 by Hugh McGillis, and its date of closure is uncertain. Elizabeth Losey places it at the mouth of the Etomami River in the Hudson Bay Regional Park. There is a provincial marker at the ...
Wascana Creek Sub-basin is the name given to Wascana Creek's drainage basin.Along with the Moose Jaw River Watershed, [5] it is one of four sub-basins that make up the Wascana & Upper Qu’Appelle Watersheds; the other three being the Last Mountain Lake Sub-basin, Upper Qu’Appelle Sub-basin, and Lanigan-Manitou Sub-basin.