| Red Deer River | |
|---|---|
Red Deer River in Drumheller, Alberta |
|
| Origin | Sawback Range, Red Deer Lakes 51°31′56″N 116°02′31″W / 51.53221°N 116.04201°W |
| Mouth | South Saskatchewan River near Empress 50°55′23″N 109°53′42″W / 50.92315°N 109.89493°WCoordinates: 50°55′23″N 109°53′42″W / 50.92315°N 109.89493°W |
| Basin countries | |
| Length | 724 km (450 mi) |
| Source elevation | 2,200 m (7,200 ft) |
| Mouth elevation | 579 m (1,900 ft) |
| Avg. discharge | 70 m³/s[1] |
| Basin area | 45,100 km2 (17,400 sq mi) |
The Red Deer River is a river in Alberta, Canada. It is a major tributary of the South Saskatchewan River and is part of the larger Saskatchewan-Nelson system that empties into Hudson Bay.[2]
Red Deer River has a total length of 724 km (450 mi) and a drainage area of 45,100 km2 (17,400 sq mi). Its mean discharge is 70 m³/s.[1]
The river got its name from the translation of Was-ka-soo which means "elk river" in the Cree.[citation needed]
Communities located along the Red Deer River include Sundre, Red Deer, Blackfalds and Drumheller. The city of Brooks is also located in the Red Deer River Basin.
Contents |
The river originates on the eastern slopes of the Canadian Rockies, in the Sawback Range near the Skoki Valley inside Banff National Park, and then flows east through the mountains and foothills region. It turns north-east before Sundre and keeps this heading to the city of Red Deer, where it turns east, and then south before Stettler. It flows south with its valley protected by provincial and regional parks such as Tolman Badlands Heritage Rangeland, Dry Island Buffalo Jump Provincial Park, Dry Island Corridor and Midland Provincial Park. At Drumheller it has a south-east direction, and while it flows through Dinosaur Provincial Park it turns east and flows to the Alberta/Saskatchewan border, which it crosses at Empress. It flows for 16 km through Saskatchewan before it merges into the South Saskatchewan River.
| This section does not cite any references or sources. (December 2010) |
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The waters of Ewing Lake, Little Fish Lake also flow into the Red Deer River.
Flowing through the city of Red Deer
Red Deer River north of Jenner, Alberta
The Red River is the water source for the City of Red Deer and the surrounding area. Pipelines cross under the river and there have been leaks disrupting access to potable water. [4] Increased water flow of the Red Deer River system during heavy rainfall in June 2008 eroded supporting soil, freely exposing a section of Pembina Pipeline Corporation's Cremona crude oil pipeline to the Red Deer River currents. About 75 to 125 barrels of crude oil flowed upstream from the breakpoint under a Red Deer River channel, leaving an oily sheen on Gleniffer Reservoir and 6800 kilograms (15 000 lbs) of oil-soaked debris. [5] [6] The remediation was not completed until 2011. [7]
Heavy rains in early June 2012 caused a similar but larger leak on a Plains Midstream Canada 46-year-old pipeline on a Red River tributary, Jackson Creek (Alberta) (51°52'19" 114°36'23") near Gleniffer Lake (Alberta) and Dickson Dam, [8]which spilled approximately 1000 and 3000 barrels (160,000-475,000 litres) of light sour crude into the Red Deer River. [7] [9]
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