Sturgeon River | |
---|---|
Location | |
Canada | |
Province | Ontario |
Districts | Timiskaming, Sudbury, Nipissing |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | approx. 22 km (14 mi) south of Gowganda |
• location | Unorg. West Timiskaming |
• coordinates | 47°27′08″N 80°47′30″W / 47.45222°N 80.79167°W |
Mouth | Lake Nipissing |
• location | Sturgeon Falls |
• coordinates | 46°19′02″N 79°58′04″W / 46.31722°N 79.96778°W[1] |
• elevation | 195 m (640 ft) |
Length | 230 km (140 mi)[2] |
Basin size | 6,889.4 km2 (2,660.0 sq mi)[3] |
Discharge | |
• location | Sturgeon Falls |
• average | 89.53 m3/s (3,162 cu ft/s)[3] |
The Sturgeon River is a river that springs near Lady Evelyn-Smoothwater Provincial Park in the Timiskaming District in Ontario, Canada.[1] It flows 230 kilometres (140 mi) in a mostly south-easterly direction through Sudbury and Nipissing Districts before it empties into Lake Nipissing on the north shore.[2] The town of Sturgeon Falls is located on the river about 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) north of its mouth.
The river is provincially significant recreational river[4] with some 65 sets of rapids, mostly rated CI and CII that can be run all season.[5]
Ontario Power Generation operates a hydroelectric plant on the river at Crystal Falls. From 1848 to 1879, the Hudson's Bay Company operated a fur trading post called Sturgeon River House at the mouth of this river (now turned into a local museum).[6] Up until the middle of the 20th century, the river was used to transport logs to sawmills on Lake Nipissing. The lower part of the river is prone to flooding. In 1979 the area around the community of Field experienced a disastrous flood that prompted all residential homes to be relocated.[3]
The upper (northerly) part of the Sturgeon River is protected in the Sturgeon River Provincial Park. This park consists of 79.85 square kilometres (30.83 sq mi) of protected wilderness stretched out along the river banks without any visitors facilities present. It is managed by Ontario Parks.[7]