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Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park is one of the oldest provincial parks in British Columbia, established in 1922. The park has an area of 320.35 km 2 (123.69 sq mi) and is located in the Selkirk Mountains in the West Kootenays region of BC. The park has three glaciers (Kokanee, Caribou, and Woodbury) that feed over 30 alpine lakes which are the ...
NTS 82F11 Kokanee Peak Grays Peak is a mountain in southeast British Columbia , Canada . [ 3 ] It is located in Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park in the Kootenays , [ 2 ] and is best known for being the mountain pictured on the label of Kokanee beer .
The Kokanee Range is a subrange of the Selkirk Mountains in the West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, Canada. It is located between the valley of the Slocan River (W) and that of Kootenay Lake (E), [ 1 ] and to the north of the Kootenay River and the West Arm of Kootenay Lake.
Kokanee Creek Provincial Park is a provincial park on the west shore of Kootenay Lake in the West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. Highway 3A bisects the park 19 kilometres (12 mi) east of Nelson. Established as a BC Provincial Park in 1955, it encompasses 260 hectares of sandy beaches, deltas, and coniferous forest. [3] [4]
Kokanee Lake is one of over 30 alpine lakes located in British Columbia's Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park. The lake is approximately 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) long and 400 metres (1,300 ft) wide, at an elevation of 1,981 metres (6,499 ft) and located at the head of Kokanee Creek . [ 1 ]
Kokanee Point is located on the north shore of the West Arm of Kootenay Lake, to the west of Kokanee (settlement) Kokanee Narrows, a narrows on the West Arm of Kootenay Lake; Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada, and associated placenames, including: Kokanee Glacier; Kokanee Lake; Kokanee Pass, a mountain pass located in ...
The list of provincial parks of the Kootenays contains the provincial parks located within this geographic region of the province of British Columbia. It includes parks from the three regional districts of East Kootenay , Central Kootenay and Kootenay Boundary .
Initially called "Kootenay Dominion Park", the park was created in 1920 as part of an agreement between the province of British Columbia and the Canadian federal government to build a highway in exchange for title to a strip of land, approximately 8 km (5.0 mi) on either side of the 94 km route, the Banff–Windermere Highway, to be used solely ...