Kiamika River

The Kiamika River (in French: rivière Kiamika) is a watercourse in the municipality of Kiamika, in the Antoine-Labelle Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Laurentides, in Quebec, in Canada.[1]

Kiamika River
Native nameRivière Kiamika  (French)
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
RegionLaurentides
MRCAntoine-Labelle Regional County Municipality
Basin features
ProgressionRivière du Lièvre,

Several dams have been erected in order to regulate the flow of the river, in particular on Lake Kiamika. This body of water eventually became a reservoir of 43 kilometres (26.72 mi) in area, with a maximum depth of 46 metres (151 ft). This reservoir has several large islands, some of which were contiguous lands before the submersion.[1]

History

In the XIXth Century, the first surveyors to cross the region noted in their reports that the waters of this river were relatively canoeable and warm. They underlined the perceived milder microclimate of this valley and referred to the good potential for agriculture and logging. The first logging initiatives in the valley were carried out by the MacLaren Company.[1]

From the end of the XIXth Century, several pioneers from the south settled in the lower part of the Kiamika valley, looking for new lands. Thanks to these many settlers and their families, the agro-forestry communities of Chute-Saint-Philippe, Lac-des-Écorces, Val-Barrette and Kiamika were erected in Catholic parishes and in municipalities before setting up their respective school boards.[1]

Toponymy

In the Algonquin language, the term "Kiamika" means: "steep or cut below the water". In his notes of 1863, Stanislas Drapeau, affirms that the township of Kiamica derives its name from the river, which had probably been so designated for a long time. On the 1891 township map, Petit lac Kiamika was designated Petit lac à l'Écorce. The oldest cartographic spelling of the toponym R. Kiamika appears on a map by Eugène Taché dated 1870.[2]

The toponym Kiamika River was made official on 5 December 1968 at the Place Names Bank of the Commission de toponymie du Québec.[1]

See also

Notes and references

  1. Commission de toponymie du Québec - Rivière Kiamika
  2. Source: Names and places of Quebec, work of the Commission de toponymie du Québec, published in 1994 and 1996 in the form of a printed illustrated dictionary, and in that of a CD-ROM produced by the company Micro-Intel, in 1997, from this dictionary.

Further reading

  • Janie Larivière; Aïsha Goyer (2005). Committee of the watershed of the Lièvre river (ed.). For the water quality of the Lièvre watershed - Portrait (PDF). p. 56.

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