Flows into Meadow Creek near Amethyst Lakes
52.7344 N 118.2961 W — Map 083D09 — Google — GeoHack
Name officially adopted in 1978
Official in Canada
Boundary Commission Sheet 28 (surveyed in 1921)
Association with Mount Maccarib.
Association with Mount Maccarib.
Mountain, pass and creek, from Quinnipiac for “caribou.” Caribou were seen below the peak in 1916.
The Quinnipiac were a historical Indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands. They lived in present-day Connecticut, along the Quinnipiac River. Their primary village, also called Quinnipiac, was where New Haven, Connecticut is today.
Created by the flooding of Kinbasket Lake into the Wood River valley.
Named in association with Mount Brown.
Called Robert Creek on 1921 Boundary Commission Sheet 27 (surveyed in 1920).
Named in association with Canoe River.
Named in reference to Mount Scott.
This mountain peak given its descriptive name in 1921 by Arthur Oliver Wheeler [1860–1945] of the Alberta-British Columbia Boundary Commission. The shape of the rock resembles a mallard duck.
Origin of the name unknown. Possibly named in the Alberta-British Columbia Boundary Commission surveys.