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About The west shore. (Portland, Or.) 1875-1891 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1886)
112 THE WEST SHORE. ATHABASCA AND TRIBUTARIES. T I'MIE country immediately to the north and north- weal o( frlmonton is al limn t unknown, save Along the few trails extending from linrn toward the nvmntn'ru. TLobo largo riveu, taking thoir t'tm in the foothills and firat rango of mountains, are the most southerly branches of tho groat Mackenzie River. Irving Edmonton for Jasor House, tho first river of thin system passed is the Pembina, a stream about eight chain wide, carrying a large volume of water in the spring and miny season, but not subject to rushes of high water from tho mountains, as it does not head far enough in the mountains to fool tho effects of the molt ing snow and glaciers. Tho banks are high and tim Uired with a fair growth of joplar, balm of Giload, and in somo place, of spruoo. The river winds ita tortuous course in a general northoiwtern direction. Coal in quantities is found on its banks, and somo seams are known to have Ixten burning for years. The watershed which divide the waters flowing to tlie north from those which flow to the Saskatchewan is, in some places, very narrow, the Indians say only a day's travel; in othor words aUmt fifUsm or twenty miles. Largo quantities of timUir are to be found in tho valleys at the head of this stream. Tho McIjoikI River is tho noxt stream of im)ortanco Iwyond tho Pembina. It also flows between high lands clothed with jsiplar and some sprune, and is very wind ing in lU course. Us head well into the first range, and is subject to sudden and great floods during the hot weather of tho summer, bnt dwindles to a small body of water in the fall, with a wi.lo stretch of gravelly beach on cither side. In high water this stream will have a width of alsmt six chains. Its current is very rapid, rendering it totally unfit for steamiest navigation. In the lower forty miles of the river is a succession of falls and Imsius. They are about a mile apart, over archy rapids from two to three ft in height In tho autumn the basins are very deo, with no perceptible current, while on the rapids there is hardly enough water to flsit a canoe. In the summer, with a high stago of water, the rapids are hid, and the steady fall of two or three feet to the milo give a current of tremendous to loeity. Oold in quantities sufllcient to pay fr working if aecees onnld I had with provisions, i to he found and will in time be worked, no doubt. The country along the river has, at on time, been very heavily tim. In-red, but fire have done their work there a well M further south, and any timber which still exist will l found to be surrounded by a network of muskegs and creek Coal i also to lw found, but i not likely to bo come of any ecmomio value for some generation. 8an.U.ne U the only rock oe0 in U,i place, while the drift U of the kind usually found in the bars of some of our western river. The AUialswr. called by Uie Indians the "bur river, take. iU head far in the mountain, its western and southern branohe rising close to the Fraeer and Columbia rivers, respectively, and flows east to the junc tion of the McLeod. The Jasper Pass, through which the Government route of the Canadian Pacifio Railroad was located, is the head of the river. The Indians of the Jasper country are descendents of the Iroqnnin, 0f Quelrac, and still speak that language, as well as Cree which they have learned from their neighbors. Leather from the east side of the mountains, years ago was taken by boat to Jasper, then transferred by horses to the boat encampment on tho Columbia River, and taken thence to the coast for sale to the Indians of British Columbia. The banks of the Athabasca are high and are covered with brulo and second-growth poplar, spruce and pitch pine, the result of tho ravages of fire willfully or care lessly sot out years ago, when no value was set on the primoval forests. Coal is to bo seen, but not in such quantities as on the Pembina or Saskatchewan. Gold can nlso be found from the head of the river to the Landing, but whether in paying quantities remains to bo demonstrated. Tho river is about twelve chains wide at the mouth of tho McLeod, with a strong current, and could, un doubtodly, b navigated by steamer as far as the Ghost Rapids, some distance above that point. The awful cur rent lasts to Old Fort Assiuiboine, where the river takes a bond to the north, and becomes wider, with more bars. Nothing now remains to mark the site of Fort Assiui boino, save tho heaps cnused by tho fallen chimneys and half-filled cellars. It was situated on a prairie of about two hundred acres, on tho north side of the river, and about forty foot above it It was the connecting link betweon Edmonton and Lesser Slave Lake, and a pack trail extending to the north and a cart trail to the south. The goods were forwarded by water via the Athabasca and Little Slave River and Lake, to the Hud son's Hay PoHt, on the west end of the lake. The Up per Athabasca has very little flat land along it, tho high liauks, in many places, rising straight from the river. A number of fine streams come in from the north, some of them rising in close proximity to the Smoky River; notably the Baptiste, Big Hawk, Burnt, Halfbreed and Little Slave rivers. These are from two to five chains wide and drain a largo extent of country. They are high in the spriug, but'as they do not rise in the moun tains they add little to the volume of water that pours down the Athabasca during June, July and August After oavmg the mouth of Little Slave River the Atha basca bonds to the south with a somewhat swifter cur reut than for the previous eighty miles, till the Landing is reached, thence after ita somewhat erratio course ft Beems to make up ita mind and strikes away northward to join ita waters with those of the great Mackenzie. JIuon good land though timbered, can be found in iae regions traversod by these rivers, and much that is .TO?d r'Ltb ? 8raH'1 RuJ Btuntl growth t PPlar. pares , and pitch pina Much of it by thorough burning, could be made good grazing land. The snow-fall is not extensive, and good water is plentiful. But, altogether, is not a country that will be sought by settlers until the i vast ( prairies both to the south, on the Saskatchewan, .r U'. mr$?liho Peace River, have been settled. Edmonton Bulletin.