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Lake Nipissing

Lake Nipissing
Nipissing 79.84021W 46.31887N.jpg
Lake Nipissing is located in Ontario
Lake Nipissing
Lake Nipissing
Location in Ontario
Location Ontario
Coordinates 46°16′12″N 079°47′24″W / 46.27000°N 79.79000°W / 46.27000; -79.79000Coordinates: 46°16′12″N 079°47′24″W / 46.27000°N 79.79000°W / 46.27000; -79.79000
Type Mesotrophic
Primary inflows Sturgeon River, South River, Rivière Veuve
Primary outflows French River
Catchment area 12,300 km2 (4,700 sq mi)
Basin countries Canada
Max. length 65 km (40 mi)
Max. width 25 km (16 mi)
Surface area 873.3 km2 (337.2 sq mi)
Average depth 4.5 m (15 ft)
Max. depth 52 m (171 ft)
Water volume 3.8 km3 (0.91 cu mi)
Shore length1 795 km (494 mi) (+ 619 km (385 mi) islands)
Surface elevation 196 m (643 ft)
Islands Numerous
Settlements North Bay
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Lake Nipissing (French: lac Nipissing) is a lake in the Canadian province of Ontario. It has a surface area of 873.3 km2 (337.2 sq mi), a mean elevation of 196 m (643 ft) above sea level, and is located between the Ottawa River and Georgian Bay. Excluding the Great Lakes, Lake Nipissing is the third-largest lake in Ontario. It is relatively shallow for a large lake, with an average depth of only 4.5 m (15 ft). The shallowness of the lake makes for many sandbars along the lake's irregular shoreline. The lake has many islands most of which are protected under the Protection of Significant Wetlands scheme, controlled by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry.

The largest population centre on the lake's shoreline is the city of North Bay. North Bay sits along the lake's northeastern shoreline. Other notable towns include Callander (south of North Bay along Highway 11). The larger towns toward the western end of the lake are Sturgeon Falls, Garden Village, Cache Bay and Lavigne.

Lake Nipissing drains into Georgian Bay, which is a part of Lake Huron, via the French River. Lake Nipissing lies about 25 km (16 mi) northwest of Algonquin Provincial Park. The French fur trader Étienne Brûlé was the first European to visit the lake in 1610. Jean Nicolet, another French trader and explorer had a "cabin and trading-house" for eight or nine years living among the Indians on the shores of Lake Nipissing until 1633 when he was recalled to Quebec to become Commissary and Indian Interpreter for the "Company of the Hundred Associates." The first permanent European settlement on the lake dates from around 1874 with a trading post of the Hudson's Bay Company on the northwest corner in what is now Sturgeon Falls. In 1882 the North-West Mounted Police established their presence on the north east shore.


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