Online Encyclopedia

WINNIPEG

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 732 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WINNIPEG  , a

lake and
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river of
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Canada . The lake is in Saskatchewan,
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Manitoba and
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Keewatin, and is situated between 50° 20' and 53° 50' N. and 96° 20' and 49° 15' W . It covers an
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area of 8555 sq. in., is at an altitude of 710 ft. above the sea, is 26o m. long, 25 to 6o m. wide, and contains several large islands, including
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Reindeer (70 sq. m.) and Big Island (6o sq. m.) . It is shallow, being nowhere more than 70 ft. in
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depth, and in
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con-sequence extremely stormy and dangerous . It abounds in fish, its white fish being especially celebrated . Its shores are low and on the south extremely marshy . The
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principal affluent rivers are: Red river, from the south; Winnipeg, Bloodvein, Berens and Poplar from the east; and the Dauphin and Saskatchewan from the west . It receives the surplus waters of lakes Manitoba and
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Winnipegosis, and discharges by the river Nelson into Hudson
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Bay . The river Winnipeg rises near Savanne station in 48° 47' N. and 89° 57' W., and flows in a
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westerly direction under the names of Savanne, Seine, and Rainy rivers to the Lake of the Woods; issuing thence as the Winnipeg, it flows N.W. with an exceedingly tortuous and turbulent course to the lake of the same name . It is navigable from the
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foot of the Lake of the Woods to the head of Rainy lake—with a short
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portage at Fort Frances falls—a distance of 208 m . Its principal tributary is
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English river .

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