McArthur Lake | |
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![]() McArthur, Nemei, and Tocher lakes drain into the
Nemei River | |
Location | Northern Saskatchewan Administration District |
Coordinates | 55°15′00″N 102°24′01″W / 55.2501°N 102.4004°W |
Type | Lake |
Basin countries | Canada |
Surface elevation | 328 m (1,076 ft) |
McArthur Lake is a lake in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It lies in low-relief terrain of the Canadian Shield. The climate is sub-arctic. The land is mostly covered by conifer forests, with some areas of muskeg and rocky outcrops.
McArthur Lake is at 55°15′00″N 102°24′01″W / 55.2501°N 102.4004°W, at an elevation of 328 metres (1,076 ft). [1] [a] The lake contains Charbonneau Island. [3] It is northwest of Flin Flon, Manitoba, and east of Pelican Narrows, Saskatchewan. [4] McArthur Lake drains northward into the Churchill River via the Nemei River. [4] The lake is named in honour of Duncan Archibald McArthur, a private soldier who died on 28 August 1944 during the Allied invasion of Normandy. [5]
The Attitti Lake region, which includes McArthur Lake, is typical of the flat-surfaced part of the Canadian Shield, with low hills that rarely rise as much as 100 to 150 feet (30 to 46 m) above the lakes. [4] The terrain consists of roughly parallel sinuous ridges of outcrop separated by muskeg, drift and lakes. [4] Geologically the area is in the Precambrian Kisseynew complex, underlain by an assemblage of metamorphosed sedimentary rocks that has been intricately folded, with intrusions of sill-like granitic bodies. [6]
In its northern section the McArthur Lake fault zone is parallel to the east shore of McArthur Lake, forming a steep scarp 75 to 100 feet (23 to 30 m) high. The fault zone runs south to a location about 1 mile (1.6 km) north of Galbraith Lake. [7] The Galbraith Lake folds is an open asymmetric overturned syncline with an axial plane trending 25° NE, dipping very sharply to the east, that extends south from the south end of McArthur Lake to the south of Galbraith Lake. [8] There are a number of northerly plunging folds between McArthur and Kakinagimak lakes with axial planes 20° NE, dipping sharply to the east. [9]
The lake is in the subarctic climate zone. [10] The annual average temperature is −2 °C (28 °F). The warmest month is July, when the average temperature is 16 °C (61 °F) and the coldest is January, with −29 °C (−20 °F). [11] The lake is surrounded by coniferous forest. [12] The trees are mainly black spruce ( Picea mariana), jack pine (Pinus banksiana), poplar ( populus) and scattered balsam ( populus balsamifera). Trees average more than 20 feet (6.1 m) in height. [4] There are small patches of moss-covered muskeg that support laurel ( kalmia microphylla), labrador tea, and scattered larch and black spruce. [13]
Animals hunted for meat or fur include moose, woodland caribou, black bear, beaver, otter and muskrat. Spruce partridge are common. [13]
Dark grey to black garnet- hornblende gneiss is exposed in an area from north of Bentz Bay to just south of McArthur Lake. [14] Small areas of hornblende and/or biotite migmatite are found near the lake. The light to dark gray outcrops are usually rounded and weathered. [15] Dykes, lenses, and veins of pegmatite are abundant in the meta-sedimentary rocks and granitic bodies between the north of Attitti Lake and McArthur Lake. [16] The northeast shore of Charbonneau Island has chalcopyrite and pyrite associated with stringers of pink pegmatite in biotite-hornblende migmatite. In 1958 the Hudson Bay Exploration and Development Company staked claims to this area based on a aerial electromagnetic and magnetometer survey. The company undertook a geophysical survey and some diamond drilling, then allowed the claims to lapse. [17]