Rimouski River


Rimouski River is a river emptying in Rimouski, on the South shore of St. Lawrence River, in the regional county municipality Rimouski-Neigette, in the administrative region of Bas-Saint-Laurent, in Quebec, in Canada.
From the border between New Brunswick and Quebec, the Rimouski River crosses over the unorganized territory of Lac-Huron, Quebec, as well as the municipalities of La Trinité-des-Monts, Saint-Narcisse-de-Rimouski, Saint-Valérien, Sainte-Odile-sur-Rimouski and the city of Rimouski.

Geography

Course

The Rimouski River has its source at an altitude of from the Miller Lake located in Saint-Quentin Parish, in Restigouche County, in New Brunswick, in Notre Dame Mountains. The mouth of the Miller Lake is located Southeast of coastal Southeastern of St. Lawrence River and East of the border of Quebec.
The Rimouski River flows over.
Upper Rimouski river courses
From Miller Lake, the Rimouski river flows over:
Intermediate course of the Rimouski River
From Rimouski Lake, Rimouski River flows mainly in the Rimouski Wildlife Reserve on:
Lower course of Rimouski river
From the confluence of the Ferrée River, the Rimouski river flows over:
Lower course of Rimouski river
The Rimouski River pours over the long strike of the Southeast coast of St. Lawrence River up to at low tide. This confluence is located in the harbor of Rimouski, facing the Saint-Barnabé Island. The entrance to this road is open on between the Northeast tip of the Saint-Barnabé Island and the platform of Rimouski city. This harbor is situated at the opposite of the city of Rimouski extends to the Southwest in the harbor Saint-Barnabé.

Hydrology

The watershed of Rimouski River covers an area of of which 98.6% are located in the Quebec and 1.4% in New Brunswick. The river has a Module of. The recorded maximum flow is and the minimum rate is. It has a nivo-pluvial regime with a flood in early May and another smaller at the end of October. The river receives water from 29 streams, the main ones, from upstream to downstream, the East Rimouski River, the Grand Touradi River, the Little Touradi River and Little Rimouski River. The entire network is streams. The basin also contains 864 lakes and 244 wetlands.

Geology

The entire river basin is part of the Appalachian. These are composed of sedimentary rock dating between 505 and 360 million years. The latter are aligned in parallel with the St. Lawrence River.

Toponymy

Rimouski appears in the act of concession of the Lordship of Rimouski, on April 24, 1968. According to Mgr Louis-François Richer Laflèche, the name comes from the Mi'kmaq "animouski" and mean "mansion of dog". The leader Abenaki Jos. Laurent noted in 1888 noted that Rimouski came from the Abenaqui Alemoski and means "earth of the dog". As for the popular sense of land moose statement by Father Cyprien Tanguay, he would never have been accredited. The name may refer to the presence of seals, also called "sea dogs" or "sea lions" near the mouth of the river.

Demographics

The population of the basin was 50306 person in 2007. 85% of the population lives in Rimouski, the only city in the basin.

Natural environment

47.2% of public forests are composed of stands of conifers and 23.5% of mixed forests. In private forests, 33.3% are composed of mixed forests and 23.5% are forests of deciduouss. Forests are quite young, only 2.6% are over 120 years. About 1% of forests are cut annually.
The basin includes 31 species of fishes. The most common species are the brook trout, the chub, the northern pearl dace and the red shiner belly. The mouth of the river is a popular venue for white peach to Smelt rainbow sky. The Atlantic salmon frequents on downstream to breed.
Four species of mammal live in the river: the Canadian beaver, the muskrat, the otter river and the American mink. We also found there 132 species of bird, 15 spécies of amphibian and six species of reptile.

Protection of land

The Rimouski basin includes two wildlife reserves, two controlled harvesting zones, an outfitting and a private hunting and fishing club.
As for protected areas, there are three containment areas of deer which cover 13.9% of the territory. It also meets two heronries, five habitats muskrat and four exceptional forest ecosystems.

History

The history of the basin was marked by logging. The Price Brothers and Company had a virtual monopoly of this activity. The, a fire of Rimouski saw mill burned down 250 houses and put more 2000 people in the street.