The Kitimat Ranges are one of the three main subdivisions of the Coast Mountains in British Columbia , Canada , the others being the Pacific Ranges to the south and the Boundary Ranges to the north.
9-670: The Kitimat Ranges lie between the Nass River and Portland Inlet in the north and the Bella Coola River and Burke Channel on the south, and are bounded on their east by the Hazelton Mountains and include the mountainous islands of the North Coastal Archipelago, as well as King Island , which lies between Dean Channel and the aforesaid Burke Channel. Some of those islands are part of
18-680: A separate formation known as the Coastal Trough. Although lower than the neighbouring Pacific Ranges to the south, they are in some ways more rugged, and are heavily indented by coastal inlets as well as by fjord-like lake valleys on the Interior side of the range. Rivers within or originating in, or which transit the Kitimat Ranges, are: This article about a location on the North Coast of British Columbia , Canada
27-624: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Nass River The Nass River is a river in northern British Columbia , Canada. It flows 380 km (240 mi) from the Coast Mountains southwest to Nass Bay, a sidewater of Portland Inlet , which connects to the North Pacific Ocean via the Dixon Entrance . Nass Bay joins Portland Inlet just south of Observatory Inlet . The English name "Nass"
36-775: Is a reduced form of [naːsqaʔ] , which is a loan from Tongass Tlingit , where it means "people of the Nass River". On the term: Archdeacon W. H. Collison, an authority on this subject, and who has resided at Kincolith, Nass bay, since 1883, states as follows: - "The term Nass is from the Tlingit tongue, and when, as was probable, the Tlingits from Tongass, at the entrance to Observatory inlet, met Captain Vancouver they gave him their name for the river, i.e., Nass, which means literally "the stomach," from
45-523: Is derived from the Tlingit name Naas which means "intestines" or "guts" in reference to the river's large food capacity in its fish (Naish & Story 1963; Leer, Hitch, & Ritter 2001). Can also be a Tlingit word for "food depot". Former spellings are Naas and Nasse. The Nisga'a name for the river is K'alii Aksim Lisims "Lisims (river name) Valley". The Gitxsan name is Git-Txaemsim meaning People of Txeemsim (Raven or Trickster); Xsitxemsem in
54-571: The Nass River and the Tseax if the volume of the lava flows are large enough. If the lava flows were to again reach the Nass River, it could have disastrous short-term consequences for the important salmon fisheries on the Nass River system. This is an incomplete list of tributaries, in upriver order: Tseax River Too Many Requests If you report this error to the Wikimedia System Administrators, please include
63-688: The dialect of the Gitanyow). Lisims means "murky" in Nisga'a, referring to the river's silt-laden flow. The last 40 km (25 mi) of the river are navigable. The river is a commercially valuable salmon fishery. The basin of the Nass is the location of the first modern-day treaty settlement in British Columbia, between the government of that province and the Nisga'a Nation. The name Nisga'a
72-529: The fact that their food supplies of salmon, oolachan.. a noted fishery." About 220 years ago, as recorded by the oral history of the Nisga'a people, the Nass River was dammed by a 22.5 km (14.0 mi) long lava flow which came from the Tseax Cone and destroyed the Nisga'a villages and caused the death of at least 2000 Nisga'a people by volcanic gas and poisonous smoke. The volcano has been active on at least two occasions (220 and 650 years ago) in
81-501: The last millennium. Because of our knowledge of this previous disaster, modern monitoring techniques should include studies of the gases emitted by the volcanoes and the institution of a warning system to alert people living down slope from the volcanoes . If the Tseax Cone were to erupt again, there could be a repeat of the poisonous gas disaster that happened to the Nisga'a people 220 years ago. The eruption could also cause forest fires and could potentially dam local rivers such as
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