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The River Brador (formerly named "River Bay Bradore") flows into the city of Blanc-Sablon in the regional county municipality (MRC) Le Golfe-du-Saint-Laurent Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of North Shore, in Quebec, Canada.

Brador River
Brador falls
Administrative region of Côte-Nord in Quebec
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
RegionCôte-Nord
Physical characteristics
SourceLac Bradore Cabin
  locationQuebec, Canada
MouthGulf of Saint Lawrence
  location
Blanc-Sablon, Quebec, Côte-Nord, Quebec, Canada
  coordinates
51°30′15″N 57°14′48″W
  elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length32 km (20 mi)[1]
Basin size207 km2 (80 sq mi)[1]
Discharge 
  locationStrait of Belle Isle

Geography


The Brador river rises from the "Lac Bradore Cabin", 13 kilometres (8 mi) west of the border of Quebec – Labrador. This lake supplies including water in upstream lakes: Philip Bridge and Shirt Tail. While the lake outlets Stove Pipe Gulch and L. Bezeau empties into the river Brador.

The river flows south in the far east of the Quebec; its course is parallel to the boundary of Labrador. After crossing the route 138, it flows into the Bay of Brador, located northeast of the town of Blanc-Sablon, Quebec, connected to Strait of Belle Isle. The mouth of the river is 3.2 kilometres (2.0 mi) north of the hamlet "Brador" and 13 kilometres (8 mi) west of the border Quebec – Labrador.


Toponymy


Nestled on the eastern shore of the bay of the same name, the hamlet Brador is 8 kilometres (5 mi) west of the border Quebec – Labrador. This hamlet was named in the eighteenth century under the names of "Fort Pontchartrain" and "Bay Phélipeaux". This hamlet is built into the municipality of Blanc-Sablon.

The term "Brador" is a truncated derivative of the word "Labrador". The syllable "la" of this name was amputated and is considered an article. This truncated spelling of his first element figured early in the documents of the New France. In his travel notes, Samuel de Champlain sometimes wrote "la Brador" sometimes "Labrador". In 1704, Fort Pontchartrain to be erected at Brador, under the direction of Augustin Le Gardeur de Courtemanche.

Formerly, Blanc-Sablon and its surroundings had served as a maritime and military vocation. In the municipality of Blanc-Sablon, several names use the term "Brador": village, town, bay, river, lake, bay, "Hills Brador", the "Bird Sanctuary of Brador Bay" and "biodiversity reserve Hills Brador".[2] The name "Brador River" was made official on Dec. 5, 1968, at the Bank of place names in the Geographical Names Board of Québec[3]


See also




Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
Download coordinates as: KML

References


  1. Bureau d'audiences publiques sur l'environnement (PDF; 103 kB)
  2. Wikimapia
  3. Geographical Names Board of Québec - Bank of place names - Toponyme: "Brador river".



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