geo.wikisort.org - ReservoirLac de Gras is a lake approximately 300 kilometres (190 mi) north east of Yellowknife, in the Northwest Territories of Canada. Lac de Gras was the centre of the diamond rush of the 1990s. There are two working, and one closed, diamond mines in the area, Diavik Diamond Mine, Ekati Diamond Mine, and the care and maintenance Snap Lake Diamond Mine.[2][3] It was called Ekati by aboriginal peoples.
Body of water
Lac de Gras |
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Lac de Gras |
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Location | Northwest Territories |
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Coordinates | 64°30′N 110°30′W |
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Primary outflows | Coppermine River |
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Basin countries | Canada |
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Max. length | 60 km (37 mi) |
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Max. width | 16 km (9.9 mi) |
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Surface area | 569 km2 (220 sq mi) |
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Max. depth | 56 m (184 ft) |
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Shore length1 | 740 km (460 mi) |
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Surface elevation | 396 m (1,299 ft) |
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References | [1] |
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1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure. |
The lake is ultraoligotrophic but supports a slow-growing but stable population of some eight species of cold-water fishes, including round whitefish, cisco, and lake trout. Lake trout dominate the lake, both numerically and in terms of biomass.[4]
Other native fish species include common whitefish, Arctic grayling, burbot, longnose sucker, and slimy sculpin.
Diavik Diamond Mines is conducting open-pit mining of kimberlite pipes using explosives near the lake.[4]
Lac de Gras' surface area is 56,910.8 ha (140,630 acres); the historical surface area was 57,107.2 ha (141,115 acres), about 196.4 ha larger than today. The subbasin area is 413,570 ha (1,022,000 acres) with the number of lakes smaller than 1 ha 3,487; 1-10 ha 2,080; 10-100 ha 663; and larger 100 ha 106, together with a total surface area of 135,035 ha (333,680 acres).[5]
Lac du Sauvage is a small lake that drains into Lac de Gras through a 45 m (148 ft) wide and 210 m (690 ft) long stream called the Narrows. The median flood peak discharge in the Narrows is 17.5 m3/s (620 cu ft/s) making it an important corridor for fish movements.[5]
See also
- Geography portal
- Canada portal
References
- Atlas of Canada. "Rivers in Canada". Archived from the original on 10 April 2007. Retrieved 2015-03-17.
- Power, Patrick (9 January 2013). "Arctic Star identifies Diamond Targets for Drilling in the prolific Lac de Gras area, NWT Diamond Fields". Arctic Star Exploration. Archived from the original on 15 September 2013.
- Danielson, Vivian (11 July 2011). "Randy Turner: Reflections of a diamond industry pioneer". The Northern Miner.
- Faulkner, S. G.; Tonn, W. M.; Welz, M.; Schmitt, D. R. (2006). "Effects of explosives on incubating lake trout eggs in the Canadian Arctic" (PDF). North American Journal of Fisheries Management. 26 (4): 833–842. doi:10.1577/M05-132.1. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
- Developer's Assessment Report, Jay Project, Appendix 9A, Conceptual Offsetting Plan (Report). Dominion Diamond Corporation. October 2014. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.664.2439.
Hydrography of the Northwest Territories |
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Rivers | |
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Lakes | |
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Coastal features |
- Amundsen Gulf
- Beaufort Sea
- Dolphin and Union Strait
- Fitzwilliam Strait
- Hazen Strait
- Husky Lakes
- Kellett Strait
- Liddon Gulf
- M'Clure Strait
- Minto Inlet
- Murray Inlet
- Prince of Wales Strait
- Richard Collinson Inlet
- Prince Albert Sound
- Wilkins Strait
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Authority control |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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На других языках
[de] Lac de Gras
Lac de Gras, in der Sprache der Indigenen Ekati, ist ein See in den Nordwest-Territorien Kanadas. Er liegt etwa 300 km nördlich von Yellowknife, der Hauptstadt des Territoriums. Der Lac des Gras hat eine Wasserfläche von 577 km² sowie eine Gesamtfläche einschließlich Inseln von 633 km².[2] Dabei weist er eine Länge von 60 km und eine durchschnittliche Breite von 16 km auf. Die Länge seiner Uferlinie beträgt 740 km. Der See erreicht eine maximale Tiefe von 56 m.
- [en] Lac de Gras
[fr] Lac de Gras
Le lac de Gras est un lac situé dans les Territoires du Nord-Ouest au Canada qui couvre une superficie totale d’approximativement 632 km2[1].
[ru] Гра (озеро)
Гра[2][3] (Лак-де-Гра[источник не указан 801 день], фр. Lac de Gras) — озеро Северо-Западных территорий в Канаде[1]. Расположено севернее Большого Невольничьего озера, в 300 км северо-восточнее города Йеллоунайф[2].
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