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Anthime Gaudet (1912–1914, 1919–1923, 1933–1937) Joseph Laliberté (1914–1915) Albert Laperrière (1915–1919, 1923–1924) Maurice Hurtibise (1924–1929)
Caniapiscau Reservoir Robert-Bourassa Reservoir Manicouagan Reservoir Meech Lake from Blanchet beach by south-west coast Lac des Nations Clearwater Lakes (Lac a l'Eau-Claire) Île aux Tourtes Bridge across Lake of Two Mountains, with Mont Oka in the background Pingualuit crater lake Looking south over Lake Timiskaming from Fort Témiscamingue near Ville-Marie, Quebec.
This lake is the head of the valley of the Batiscanie, Quebec.This lake has the distinction of having two emissaries: Batiscan River and Jeannotte River.The main tributary of the lake is the Rats River whose headwater lake is Rats Lake; the river flows north-east before turning south to empty into the Rats Bay, located in the western part of the lake.
Lac-du-Cerf (French pronunciation: [lak dy sɛʁf]) is a municipality in the Laurentides region of Quebec, Canada, part of the Antoine-Labelle Regional County Municipality. It is located on and named after Lac du Cerf (Deer Lake). The main economic activities are agriculture, forestry, and tourism. [1]
According to CBC News, one possibility is the 5-month old is a Kermode, a light-furred black bear subspecies. Another theory proposes the cub is an albino. Related: Also see more unusual critters:
This park is administered by the "Corporation du Parc du Poisson-Blanc" (trans-en|Poisson-Blanc Parks Development Corporation) (CPPB) which is a non-profit organization and whose head office is located at 37 ch. de la Truite, Notre-Dame-du-Laus, Quebec, J0X 2M0. The CPPB was registered on March 7, 2005 in the Quebec enterprise register.
Until concrete evidence suggesting its existence was discovered in 1975, biologists typically discounted the idea that a grizzly bear had once roamed northern Quebec. Various reports of brown bears from 1900 to 1950 were written off as colour morphs of the more common American black bear.