Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/canada

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Red Deer River

River in Alberta and Saskatchewan, Canada

Red Deer River

Summary

River in Alberta and Saskatchewan, Canada

FieldValue
nameRed Deer River
imageRed deer river.jpg
image_captionRed Deer River in Drumheller, Alberta
source1_locationSawback Range, Red Deer Lakes
source1_coordinates
mouth_locationSouth Saskatchewan River near Empress
mouth_coordinates
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1Canada
length_km724
source1_elevation2200 m
mouth_elevation579 m
discharge1_avg70 m3/s
basin_size_km245100

The Red Deer River is a river in Alberta and a small portion of Saskatchewan, 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.

The river has a total length of 724 km and a drainage area of 45100 km2. Its mean discharge is 70 m3/s.

The river is named for the translation of a native term for the river, wâwâskêsiw sîpiy, which means "elk river" in the Cree language. "Red deer" was an alternative name for elk, referring to a closely related Eurasian species.

Communities located along the Red Deer River include Sundre, Red Deer, Drumheller, and Empress, The city of Brooks, as well as Dinosaur Provincial Park, are also located in the Red Deer River Basin. A glacial flood about 18,000 years ago eroded out a portion of this basin and apparently all or most of the scenic badlands bearing the dinosaur and other Cretaceous fossils.

History

Joseph Tyrrell discovered a huge coal seam here in 1883, besides large dinosaur skeletons.

2013 Alberta flood

Main article: 2013 Alberta floods

In June 2013, Alberta, Canada, experienced heavy rainfall that triggered catastrophic flooding throughout much of the southern half of the province along the Bow, Elbow, Highwood, Oldman, and Red Deer rivers and tributaries. Twenty-four municipalities declared local states of emergency as water levels rose and numerous communities were placed under evacuation orders. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police stated four people may have drowned near High River. Over 100,000 people in the region were displaced.

Course

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 flows to an artificial reservoir named Gleniffer Lake, created in 1983 by the Dickson Dam 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.

Tributaries

;Canadian Rockies and Rocky Mountain Foothills

  • Red Deer Lakes
  • Douglas Creek
    • Douglas Lake, Donald Lake, Gwendolyn Lake
  • Drummond Creek
  • Skeleton (Horseshoe) Lake
  • McConnell Creek
  • Divide Creek
  • Pipit Lake
  • Snowflake Lake
  • Tyrell Creek
  • Scalp Creek
  • Bighorn Creek
  • Eagle Creek
  • Wildhorse Creek
  • Panther River
    • Dormer River
  • Wigwam Creek
  • Yara Creek
  • McCue Creek
  • Logan Creek
  • Bear Creek
  • Burnt Timber Creek
  • Bull Creek
  • Vam Creek
  • Brown Creek
  • Williams Creek
  • Helmer Creek
  • Cartier Creek
  • Coalcamp Creek
The Red Deer River (upper left) merging into the South Saskatchewan River east of Empress, Alberta

;Central Alberta

  • Nitchi Creek
  • Fallentimber Creek
  • Bearberry Creek
  • Jackson Creek (Alberta)
  • James River
  • Schrader Creek
  • Eagle Creek
  • Raven River
    • North Raven River
  • Little Red Deer River
  • Medicine River
  • Kenning Lake
  • Sylvan Creek
  • Piper Creek
  • Blindman River
  • Threehills Creek
  • Kneehills Creek
  • Rosebud River
  • Bullpound Creek
  • Berry Creek
  • Blood Indian Creek
  • Ghostpine Creek
    • Pine Lake
  • Waskasoo Creek
    • Piper Creek
  • Alkali Creek

The waters of Ewing Lake, Little Fish Lake also flow into the Red Deer River.{{cite web | access-date =2014-08-29}}{{cite web | access-date =2014-08-29}}

Fish species

Sport fish include: walleye, northern pike, sauger, lake whitefish, yellow perch, burbot, lake sturgeon, mountain whitefish, goldeye, brown trout, bull trout, rainbow trout, brook trout, and cutthroat trout.

Other fish include: emerald shiner, river shiner, spottail shiner, flathead chub, longnose dace, quillback (quillback carpsucker), longnose sucker, white sucker, shorthead redhorse, silver redhorse, perch, spoonhead sculpin, lake chub, northern pearl dace, northern redbelly dace, finescale dace, fathead minnow and brook stickleback.

Environmental concerns

Pipeline leaks

The Red Deer 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. 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 of crude oil flowed upstream from the break point under a Red Deer River channel, leaving an oily sheen on Gleniffer Reservoir and 6800 kg of oil-soaked debris.{{cite report |access-date=2012-06-16 |archive-date=20 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120420105353/http://www.ercb.ca/docs/documents/reports/IR_20090219_PembinaPipelineFailure.pdf |url-status=dead |access-date=2012-06-16 |access-date=2012-06-16

Heavy rains in early June 2012 caused a similar but larger leak on a Plains Midstream Canada 46-year-old pipeline on a Red Deer River tributary, Jackson Creek, Alberta () near Gleniffer Lake and Dickson Dam, which spilled approximately 1000 and of light sour crude oil into the Red Deer River. |access-date = 2012-06-16 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120620120511/http://www.calgaryherald.com/Ewart+Calls+growing+probe+aging+pipeline+system/6793089/story.html |archive-date = 20 June 2012

Climate

Red Deer

Red Deer has a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb), with something of a semi-arid influence due to the city's location within Palliser's Triangle. The highest temperature ever recorded in Red Deer was 37.2 C on 8 July 1906, 2 July 1924, and 28 & 29 June 1937. The lowest recorded temperature was -50.6 C on 17 December 1924. The city lies in the 4a plant hardiness zone. Summers are typically warm and rainy with cool nights. Winters are typically long, cold, and very dry.

Empress

Empress is located in the steppe region known as Palliser's Triangle and experiences a semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification BSk). Winters are long, cold and dry, while summers are short, but with average daytime highs that are warm to hot, though nighttime lows are cool. Spring and autumn are quite short, essentially transition periods between winter and summer. Wide diurnal temperature ranges are regular, due to the aridity and moderately high elevation. Low humidity is prevalent throughout the year. Annual precipitation is very low, with an average of 311.6 mm, and is heavily concentrated in the warmer months. On average, the coldest month is January, with a mean temperature of -12 C, while the warmest is July, with a mean temperature of 19.8 C. The driest month is February, with an average of 8.6 mm of precipitation, while the wettest is June, with an average of 68.9 mm.

References

References

  1. "From the Mountains to the Sea Summary of The State of The Saskatchewan River Basin".
  2. Atlas of Canada. "Rivers in Canada".
  3. "itwêwina: the online Cree dictionary".
  4. (1986). "Fortunes in the Ground". The Boston Mills Press.
  5. Wood, James. (2013-06-22). "Harper, Redford promise to help". Calgary Herald.
  6. (21 June 2013). "RCMP: 4 possibly dead in Alberta floods as Calgary continues evacuation". Global News.
  7. (21 June 2013). "4 feared dead from Alberta floods". [[CBC News.
  8. "Map of Jackson Creek, Alberta, River - Canada Geographical Names with Maps".
  9. "Assessment of Sport Fish Distribution and Relative Abundance in the Lower Red Deer River, Alberta, Phase II".
  10. "Waskasoo | Kerry Wood Nature Centre | Fort Normandeau".
  11. "CBC.ca News - Alberta residents angry after oil spills into nearby lake".
  12. {{Cite cgndb. IAMBB. Jackson Creek
  13. [https://web.archive.org/web/20150724113453/http://www.geodata.us/canada_names_maps/maps.php?featureid=IAMBB&f=258Feature Name: Jackson Creek]
  14. "Plant Hardiness Zone by Municipality". Government of Canada.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Red Deer River — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report