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La Vérendrye wildlife reserve is one of the largest reserves in the province of Quebec, Canada, covering 12,589 square kilometres (4,861 sq mi) [1] of contiguous land and lake area (Assinica wildlife reserve is the largest in the province, but its territory is broken up in four non-contiguous parts).
La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve, Quebec La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve, Quebec. Joseph-Émile Brunette's statue of Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye, is located in Saint Boniface, Manitoba. Numerous places were named in his honour: La Verendrye Provincial Park in Ontario; La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve in Quebec
La Verendrye Provincial Park is a waterway provincial park located in Ontario, Canada, on the border with the U.S. state of Minnesota.The park stretches from Quetico Provincial Park through Saganaga Lake, up the Pine River, across the Height of Land Portage, then down the Pigeon River to Pigeon River Provincial Park on Lake Superior.
The reserve is an enclave within the Lac-Pythonga unorganized territory and in the middle of the La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve. It is accessible by a short road from Quebec Route 117, approximately 80 kilometres (50 mi) north of Grand-Remous. In recent years, the community has been troubled by poor living conditions, financial difficulties ...
Réservoir-Dozois (French pronunciation: [ʁezɛʁvwaʁ dozwa]) is an unorganized territory in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region of Quebec, Canada. It is the largest of five unorganized territories in the La Vallée-de-l'Or Regional County Municipality and entirely part of the La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve.
It is located on the boundary between the unorganized territories of Lac-Pythonga and Réservoir-Dozois, and fully within the La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve. The First Nations reserve of Rapide Lake is on its western shores. Its name is derived from the Algonquin kakibonga and means "completely blocked by sand." [3]
La Verendrye Provincial Park, in Ontario, Canada; La Vérendrye Trail, in Manitoba, Canada; La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve, in Quebec, Canada; Parc de la Vérendrye (Le Domaine) Water Aerodrome, in Quebec, Canada; Verendrye, North Dakota, a ghost town in McHenry County; Verendrye National Monument, a former US national monument in North Dakota
It retained only two small non-contiguous areas totalling 303.81 km 2 (117.30 sq mi), of which its western part was a small section of land straddling the north shore of Lake Lemoine and its eastern part is an almost square tract surrounding Lake Granet, mostly part of the La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve.