Mistaya River

The Mistaya River is a short river in western Alberta, Canada. It flows through the Canadian Rockies, and a section of the Icefields Parkway was built along its course.

Mistaya River
Mistaya River before the falls
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceAlberta
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationPeyto Lake
Length38 km (24 mi)
Basin features
River systemNorth Saskatchewan River

Mistaya River originates in Peyto Lake, a glacial lake of typical blue colour (due to rock flour). Mistaya flows north-west, receiving the waters of creeks such as Delta, Silverhorn, Cirque, Noyes, Chephren, Totem, Epaulette, Bison, Kaufmann and Sarback. A series of elongated lakes are formed along the river: Mistaya Lake and Waterfowl Lakes.

Mistaya merges into the North Saskatchewan River at Saskatchewan River Crossing.

From its headwaters of Peyto Creek, Mistaya River has a total length of 38 km.

The origin of the name is from the Cree language: ᒥᐢᑕᐦᐊᔭ (mistahaya) means "grizzly bear".[1][2][3]

See also

References

  1. Koller, Brenda. The Canadian Rockies Adventure Guide.
  2. Fromhold, Joachim. 2001 INDIAN PLACE NAMES OF THE WEST, Part 2: Listings by Nation.
  3. "Search results". www.creedictionary.com. Retrieved 2020-11-19.


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