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English: Utsingi Point, East arm of Great Slave Lake, Canada. This was in the eastern edge of the proposed Thaydene Nene National Park Reserve, but is outside the final approved park boundary. This was in the eastern edge of the proposed Thaydene Nene National Park Reserve, but is outside the final approved park boundary.
Great Slave Lake [1] [a] is the second-largest lake in the Northwest Territories of Canada (after Great Bear Lake), the deepest lake in North America at 614 m (2,014 ft), [2] and the tenth-largest lake in the world by area.
Big Arm State Park is a Montana state park that is a unit of Flathead Lake State Park near Big Arm, Montana. Big Arm State Park is located on the western shores of Flathead Lake, the largest natural freshwater lake in the western United States. The park's recreational activities include fishing, boating, RV and tent camping, and swimming. [2] [4]
It was not a fur trading outpost although the site was later used by trappers in the Thelon River area. In 1897, a log cabin, using one of the chimneys, was built by an American trapper, Buffalo Jones. [3] Fort Reliance was designated a National Historic Site in 1953. [4]
Thaidene Nene National Park Reserve (from the Dene, this Chipewyan name means land of our ancestors [1]) is a national park in the vicinity of the east arm of Great Slave Lake, located on the northern edge of the boreal forest of Canada in the North Slave Region of the Northwest Territories. [2]
Glacial Lake Columbia in central Washington State; Glacial Lake Spokane in eastern Washington near Spokane. Lake Missoula; 15,000 – 13,000 YBP in western Montana. [31] Great Basin of California, Nevada, Utah, Oregon & Idaho: Lake Lahontan; 12,700 – 9,000 YBP in Nevada, California and Oregon. Lake Alvord in Oregon and Nevada; Lake Amboy in ...
Chief Snuff lived on the south shore and east arm of Great Slave Lake. The people who lived on the Taltson River were dubbed the Rocher River People in the 1920s. Chief Snuff had a cabin located about ten miles from Rocher River on a little piece of land beside the water, called Snuff Channel, connected to the Taltson River.
Great Slave Lake is slightly smaller, with an area of 28,568 square kilometres (11,030 sq mi) and containing 2,088 cubic kilometres (501 cu mi) of water, although it is significantly deeper than Great Bear. [18] The third major lake, Athabasca, is less than a third that size with an area of 7,800 square kilometres (3,000 sq mi). [15]