List of rivers and water bodies of Montreal Island explained

The rivers and water bodies of Montreal are few and mostly artificial. Hydrography of the island of Montreal remained intact until approximately XIXth when Montreal underwent major urban works, including the construction of the Lachine Canal and the creation of the first major parks of Montreal.

History

Last Ice Age

After the Ice Age, around 13,000 years ago, Montreal and the Saint Lawrence Lowlands were flooded by the Champlain Sea. Within a few centuries, as and when these waters receded, Mount Royal and its three summits emerged into islands. With the complete withdrawal of the sea, water was retained in some depression of the island. This was the case amongst others of Beaver Lake, located in the palm of Mount Royal. This gradually dried up to become a fen.[1] It was artificially dredged (excavated) in 1938.

Before XIXth

There used to be a complex hydrographic, which is now destroyed or channeled.[2] [3]

started in Côte-des-Neiges down to Notre-Dame-de-Grâce and widened forming Lake Otter. It then narrowed back to a river and lead to the St. Lawrence River in Nuns' Island.

Today

Today there are only a handful of streams and lakes in nature. However, many parks have ponds or artificial lakes of large size.

List of water bodies

Below is a partial list of current waters bodies of the island:

Name Photo Location Contact information Type Area (ha)
artificial
artificial
Olympic pool artificial
Lake Île Notre-Dame artificial
Centennial Lake artificial
Lac des Dauphins artificial
Lac des Battures artificial
Main pond Parc Angrignon artificial
Little Basin artificial
Swan Lake artificial
Pond Fountain artificial
artificial
Basin Jarry Park artificial

List of rivers

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.ledevoir.com/societe/science-et-technologie/408486/le-lac-aux-castors-habite-par-le-rongeur-il-y-a-11-000-ans Article of "journal Le Devoir" - Beaver Lake (Lac aux Castors) on Mount Royal
  2. Web site: Radio-Canada . 2016-10-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140429191603/http://rivieresperdues.radio-canada.ca/fr/villes/montreal#river4 . 2014-04-29 . dead .
  3. https://sites.google.com/site/indigenecommunity/home/mapping-ecological-indigenous-heritage sites.google.com Carte des sites de l'héritage autochtone
  4. Web site: Radio-Canada, emission "Rivières perdues". . 2016-10-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170425195421/http://rivieresperdues.radio-canada.ca/fr/villes/montreal/histoire/13 . 2017-04-25 . dead .
  5. http://pacmusee.qc.ca/fr/ a-propos de Pointe-à-Callière museum/museum/future-expansion-museum-projects Article "À propos du musée de Pointe-à-Callière"
  6. http://gaiapresse.ca/nouvelles/des-rivieres-perdues-un-ruisseau-meconnu-36348.html Article "Des rivières perdues - un ruisseau méconnu"