Beaver River (Columbia River tributary)

River in British Columbia, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Beaver River, also known as the Beavermouth Creek or Beaver Creek, is a tributary of the Columbia River in British Columbia, Canada, joining that river in the Rocky Mountain Trench northwest of the town of Golden. It enters the Columbia via Kinbasket Lake.

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Beaver River
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Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
DistrictKootenay Land District
Physical characteristics
SourceBeaver Glacier
  locationGlacier National Park
  coordinates51°03′36″N 117°17′47″W[1]
MouthColumbia River
  location
Kinbasket Lake
  coordinates
51°32′N 117°26′W[2]
Basin size1,150 km2 (440 sq mi)[3]
Discharge 
  locationNear the mouth[3]
  average41.9 m3/s (1,480 cu ft/s)[3]
  minimum2.08 m3/s (73 cu ft/s)
  maximum429 m3/s (15,100 cu ft/s)
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The Beaver River is the eastern egress from the Rogers Pass and its valley is the route of the Trans-Canada Highway and Canadian Pacific Railway on that side of the pass, and it is located in Glacier National Park. Its lower reaches are officially named Beaver Canyon.[4] The pass between the Beaver River and the Duncan River forms the dividing line between the Selkirks and the Purcell Mountains.

A semi-decommissioned hiking trail follows the Beaver from the Trans-Canada highway for much of its length, including now-abandoned spurs to Copperstain Pass and Glacier Circle. The trail no longer receives maintenance from Parks Canada, which closed remaining stream crossings in 2009.[5]

See also

References

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