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There exists a number of canals in Canada that are used as aqueducts, diversionary channels for power stations, and for shippings.
Natural canals
editA natural canal exists between the Magaguadavic River and Lake Utopia outside St. George, New Brunswick.
Shipping canals
editActive
editAbandoned
editCanal | Province | Length | Number of locks | Start point | End point | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baillie-Grohman Canal | British Columbia | 1.5 km (0.93 mi) | Columbia River | Kootenay River | 1889 | 1902 | ||
Coteau-du-Lac canal | Quebec | 100 m (330 ft) | 3 | 1781 | ||||
Desjardins Canal | Ontario | Cootes Paradise | Hamilton Harbour | 1837 | 1895 | |||
Newmarket Canal | Ontario | 16 km (9.9 mi) | 3 | Lake Simcoe | East Holland River (Newmarket) | — | — | The canal was cancelled during its construction. |
Shubenacadie Canal | Nova Scotia | 114 km (71 mi) | 1[note 3] | Halifax Harbour (Dartmouth) | Cobequid Bay (Maitland) | 1856 | 1871 | |
Soulanges Canal | Quebec | 5 | 1899 | 1958 | ||||
Welland Recreational Waterway | Ontario | Welland Canal | Welland Canal | c. 1970s | The waterway formed a part of the original alignment for the Welland Canal that passed Welland, prior to the completion of the Welland By-Pass in the 1970s. Motorboats are prohibited from the Welland Recreational Waterway. |
Parts of the Rouge River in Markham, Ontario were being planned by William Berczy in the 1790s as a navigation route between Lake Simcoe and Lake Ontario via Holland River but did not progress beyond clearing of 24 miles along the route.[1]
Other types of canals
editCanal | Province | Start point | End point | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canal de l'Aqueduc | Quebec | City of Montreal pumping station (Pointe-Saint-Charles) | Open-air aqueduct canal used by the city of Montreal. | |
Kootenay Canal | British Columbia | Kootenay River | Kootenay River | Diversionary canal for the Kootenay Canal hydroelectric plant. |
Seton Canal | British Columbia | Seton Lake | Fraser River | Diversionary canal for the Seton Powerhouse. |
Notes
edit- ^ The Lachine Canal initially had seven locks when it opened. The number of locks was reduced to five during the canal's expansion in the 1840s.
- ^ Portions of the Saint Lawrence Seaway also extends into the US state of New York.
- ^ The Shubenacadie Canal initially had nine locks and two inclined planes. The number of operational locks was eventually reduced to one.
References
edit- ^ "History - Rouge Park - Featured Parks | City of Toronto". Archived from the original on 2016-08-27. Retrieved 2016-08-03.