Noire River (Shawinigan)


The Rivière Noire is a tributary of the east bank of the Saint-Maurice River, flowing south on in the territory of Hérouxville from the MRC Mékinac and south-west on in Shawinigan, in the administrative region of Mauricie, in Quebec, in Canada.

Geography

The Black River draws its sources from a wetland located a few hundred meters north of rang Saint-Pierre-Nord road and from various agricultural streams located west of route 153, west of the village of Hérouxville. In particular, it drinks from the Duchesne stream.
The river flows a priori towards the south in Hérouxville, then enters the territory of the old village municipality of Saint-Georges. Then the river slants to the southwest passing near the Garneau-Jonction train station. It then crosses the Saint-Georges-de-Champlain sector, recovering water, in particular from the "Trahan branch" at from its mouth. In short, the river flows in parallel to the railway and to route 153.
The waters flow into a long bay which forms an appendix to the artificial reservoir generated by the hydroelectric dam erected on the Saint-Maurice River, in the Saint-Georges-de-Champlain sector of the town of Shawinigan. A magnificent municipal gazebo has been built on the south shore of this narrow bay.

Toponymy

The Black River toponym was formalized on December 5, 1968 at the Place Names Bank of the Commission de toponymie du Québec.

Appendices

Related articles