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HUDSON See also: sea in the N.E. of See also: Canada, extending from 78° to 95° W. and from 51° to 700 N
.
On the See also: east it is connected with the See also: Atlantic Ocean by Hudson Strait, and on the See also: north with the Arctic Ocean by See also: Fox Channel and Fury and Hecla Strait
.
Its See also: southern extremity between 55° and 51° N. is known as See also: James
See also: Bay
.
It is 590 M. in width, and 1300 from S. to N., including James Bay (350 m.) and Fox Channel (350 m.)
.
The customary use of the See also: term includes James Bay, but not Fox Channel
.
The See also: average See also: depth of See also: water is about 70 fathoms, deepening at the entrance of Hudson Strait to Too fathoms
.
James Bay is much shallower, and unfit for See also: shipping save for a central channel leading to the mouth of the See also: Moose See also: river
.
The centre and west of the See also: main bay are absolutely See also: free from shoals, rocks or islands, but down its east See also: coast extend two lines of small islands, one close to See also: shore, the other at 70 to 100 M. distance, and comprising a number of scattered See also: groups (the See also: Ottawa Islands, the Sleepers, the Belchers, &c.)
..
Into Hudson and James Bays flow numerous important See also: rivers, so much so that the water of the latter is rather brackish than See also: salt
.
Beginning at the north-west, the chief of these are See also: Churchill, Nelson (draining Lake See also: Winnipeg, and the numerous inland rivers of which it is the See also: basin), Hayes (the old boat route of the voyageurs to Winnipeg), See also: Severn, Albany, Moose, See also: Rupert river (draining Lake Mistassini), Nottaway, East Main, See also: Great See also: Whale and Little Whale
.
Save for some high bluffs on the east and north-east, the shores of the bay are low
.
Around much of James Bay extend marshes and swampy ground
.
Geologically the greater See also: part of the Hudson Bay See also: district belongs to the Laurentian See also: system, though there are numerous outcrops of later formation; Cambro-See also: Silurian on the See also: south and west, and to the north of Cape See also: Jones (the north-eastern extremity of James Bay) a narrow
See also: belt of See also: Cambrian rocks, of which the islands are composed
.
See also: Coal, See also: plumbago, iron and other minerals have been found in various districts near the coast
.
The See also: climate is harsh, though vegetables and certain See also: root crops ripen in the open air as far north as Fort Churchill; cattle flourish, and are fed chiefly on the native See also: grasses; spruce, balsam and See also: poplar grow to a See also: fair See also: size as far as the See also: northern limit of James Bay
.
Caribou, See also: musk ox and other animals are still found in large numbers, and there is an abundance of feathered game—ducks, geese, loons and See also: ptarmigan; hunting and fishing See also: form the chief occupations of the See also: Indians and See also: Eskimo who live in scattered bands near the shore
.
The bay abounds with See also: fish, of which the chief are See also: cod, See also: salmon, porpoise and whales
.
The last have long been pursued by See also: American whalers, whose destructive methods have so greatly depleted the supply that the See also: government of Canada is anxious to declare the bay a See also: mare clausum
.
Hudson Strait is about 450 M. long with an average breadth of too in., narrowing at one point to 45
.
Its shores are high and bold, rarely less in height than See also: I000 ft., save on the coast of See also: Ungava Bay, a deep indentation on the south-east
.
No islands or rocks impede navigation
.
Its depth is from too to 200 fathoms
.
Owing to the violence of the tides, which rise to a height of 35 ft., it never absolutely freezes over
.
After three centuries of exploration, the navigability of Hudson Bay and Strait remains a vexed question
.
To Canada it is one of great commercial See also: interest, and numerous expeditions have been made and reports issued by the See also: Geological Survey
.
From Winnipeg to Liverpool via Churchill is over Soo in. less than via See also: Montreal, and from See also: Edmonton to Liverpool almost moo m. less
.
Were navigation open for a sufficient See also: time, such a route for the grain of the See also: Canadian and American west would be of enormous See also: advantage
.
But the inlet from the Arctic sends down masses of heavy ice, which See also: drift about in the bay and the strait
.
Past the mouth of the strait flows a stream often over too m. wide, of See also: berg and floe ice, carried by the Arctic current
.
Owing to the proximity of the Magnetic See also: Pole (in See also: Boothia) the compass often refuses to See also: work
.
For sailing See also: ships, such as the Hudson's Bay See also: Company has long employed, the season for safe navigation is from the 15th of See also: July to the 1st of See also: October
.
In over goo years very few serious accidents have occurred to the company's ships within these limits
.
It is claimed that specially built and protected steamers would be safe from the 15th of See also: June till the 1st of See also: November, and the problem may be solved by ice-breaking vessels of great power
.
The .only See also: good harbour availableis Fort Churchill, at the mouth of the Churchill river, which is large and easy of See also: access
.
Moose Factory (at the See also: foot of James Bay) and See also: York Factory (at the mouth of the Nelson) are See also: mere roadsteads
.
Marble See also: Island, south of Chesterfield Inlet, where the whalers winter, is too far north for See also: regular shipping
.
The Cabots entered the strait in 1498, and during the next century a series of Elizabethan mariners; but the bay was not explored until 161o, whenSee also: Henry Hudson pushed through the ice and explored to the southern limit of James Bay
.
See
See also: Lieutenant See also: Gordon, R.N., Reports on the Hudson's Bay Expeditions (1884, 5, 6); See also: William Ogilvie, Exploratory Survey to Hudson's Bay in 1890 (Ottawa, 1891); R
.
F
.
Stupart, The Navigation of Hudson's Bay and Straits (
See also: Toronto, 1904)
.
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