| Hay River |
|
|---|---|
| Origin | Northern Alberta 58°05′06″N 119°01′19″W / 58.08496°N 119.02201°W |
| Mouth | Great Slave Lake at Hay River 60°51′41″N 115°43′58″W / 60.86134°N 115.73290°WCoordinates: 60°51′41″N 115°43′58″W / 60.86134°N 115.73290°W |
| Basin countries | Canada |
| Length | 702 kilometres (436 mi) |
| Source elevation | 720 metres (2,360 ft) |
| Mouth elevation | 156 metres (512 ft) |
| Avg. discharge | 3,630,000 dam³ |
| Basin area | 48,200 square kilometres (18,600 sq mi) |
The Hay River is a large river in northern Alberta and southern Northwest Territories, Canada.
It originates in the muskeg of north western Alberta, flows west to British Columbia, then curves northward and returns to Alberta, where it follows a north-northeast course towards the Northwest Territories. After passing over two main waterfalls, the Alexandra Falls and Louise Falls, it flows through the town of Hay River and discharges into the Great Slave Lake. From there, its waters are carried to the Arctic Ocean by the Mackenzie River.
Hay River has a total length of 702 km and a drainage area of 48,200 km².[1]
Tributaries of the Hay River are the Chinchaga River, Meander River, Steen River, Melvin River and Little Hay River. The Hay River effectively flows through the Hay-Zama Lakes. Rainbow Lake is a widening of the river itself.[2]
Communities in the Hay River basin include Rainbow Lake, Zama City, Steen River, Indian Cabins in Alberta and Enterprise and the homonymous Hay River in the Northwest Territories. There are two first nations communities in the river basin: Chateh and Meander River.
At the Alberta/Northwest Territories border, the annual discharge is 3,630,000 dam³.[3] The only official campground along the river is at the 60th Parallel Campground.
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