Mackenzie River: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Mackenzie River drainage basin.PNG|right|thumb|350px|{{#ifexist:Template:Mackenzie River drainage basin.PNG/credit|{{Mackenzie River drainage basin.PNG/credit}}<br/>|}}MacKenzie River drainage basin.]]
[[Image:Mackenzie River drainage basin.PNG|right|thumb|350px|{{#ifexist:Template:Mackenzie River drainage basin.PNG/credit|{{Mackenzie River drainage basin.PNG/credit}}<br/>|}}MacKenzie River drainage basin.]]



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MacKenzie River drainage basin.

The Mackenzie River is the river with the second largest drainage basin in North America.[1] The Mackenzie and its tributaries drain 1,805,200 square kilometers. Its mean discharge is 9,700 cubic metres per second. It is 4,241 long.

The river flows North, emptying into the Beaufort Sea, in the Arctic Ocean. The main river is navigable to barge traffic from its source, Great Slave Lake, after the ice melts. During winter the ice on the river freezes deeply enough to support large cargo trucks.

There is an intermodal terminal at Hay River, Northwest Territories. Hay River is the northernmost terminus of the North American railway grid. A fleet of tugs based in Hay River serves communities on the river and its tributaries, and many communities and resource development projects in the Arctic Ocean.

References