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Thunder Bay (Ontario)

Bay of Lake Superior

Thunder Bay (Ontario)

Summary

Bay of Lake Superior

FieldValue
nameThunder Bay
imageThunder Bay.jpg
captionThunder Bay as seen from Sleeping Giant
locationThunder Bay District, Ontario, Canada
coordinates
typeBay
part_ofLake Superior
inflowKaministiquia River, Current River
length34 mi
width15 mi
area
depth
max-depth
volume
shore
elevation183 m
temperature_high
temperature_low
islandsCaribou, Pie, Welcome Islands
citiesThunder Bay
pushpin_mapCanada Ontario
pushpin_map_altMap of Ontario

| max-depth =

Thunder Bay is a large bay on the northern shore of Lake Superior, in Thunder Bay District, Ontario, Canada. The bay is bordered to the east by the Sibley Peninsula at the southern tip of which is Thunder Cape, marking the entrance to the bay for ships approaching from the east. The mesas and sills on the peninsula are known as the Sleeping Giant due to their appearance when viewed from Thunder Bay.

The harbour at the City of Thunder Bay is Canada's westernmost port on the Great Lakes.

The Ojibwa called it Animikie, meaning "thunder". French explorers called it Baie du Tonnerre which was translated to Thunder Bay in English. In 1871, the bay gave its name to the newly created Thunder Bay District, and in 1970, the amalgamated city of Port Arthur and Fort William also adopted the name Thunder Bay.

The waters along the bay's shores form part of the Lake Superior Water Trail. This 1000 km long water trail is a link in the Trans Canada Trail network and provides paddlers access to the bay and facilities for travel along the coast from Gros Cap to the City of Thunder Bay.

Geography

Sleeping Giant as seen across Thunder Bay

Thunder Bay is an extensive diamond-shaped body of water surrounded by cliffs rising from 1000 ft to 1500 ft out of the lake. It is about 34 mi long in a northeast-southwest direction, and about 15 mi wide from northwest to southeast. Its eastern entrance is Thunder Cape, a prominent headland at the southern tip of Sibley Peninsula. Pie Island divides the mouth of the bay into 2 channels.

Notable islands and island chains in the bay include:

  • Pie Island and nearby Flatland Island
  • Welcome Islands
  • Caribou Island

Rivers emptying into the bay include the:

  • Kaministiquia River
  • Neebing River
  • McIntyre River
  • Current River
  • MacKenzie River (18 km east of the city)
  • Blende River
  • Wild Goose Creek
  • Blind Creek

References

References

  1. {{Cite cgndb. FCWFZ. Thunder Bay
  2. "About: The Superior Way West". Port of Thunder Bay.
  3. (30 November 2023). "History of Thunder Bay". City of Thunder Bay.
  4. (2024). "Lake Superior Water Trail". Lake Superior Watershed Conservancy.
  5. Robert C. Ray, United States Hydrographic Office. (1896). "Sailing Directions for the Great Lakes and Connecting Waters". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  6. (1997). "United States Coast Pilot - Great Lakes, Lakes Ontario, Erie, Huron, Michigan, and Superior and St. Lawrence River". U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Ocean Survey.
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.

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