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Encyclopedia > Liard River

The Liard River is a river that flows through the Yukon Territory, British Columbia and the Northwest Territories, and in Canada. It is 1,215 km (755 miles) long. It begins in the southeast of the Yukon Territory in the Pelly Mountains. It flows southeast into northern British Columbia, passes through the main range of the Rocky Mountains and then flows northeast through dense forests into the Mackenzie River at Fort Simpson, Fort Smith Region in the Northwest Territories. The South Nahanni and Fort Nelson rivers are its chief tributaries. It is navigable to Fort Liard, 165 miles from its mouth.


The area around the river in the Yukon Territory is called the Liard River Valley.


The Alaska Highway follows the river for part of its route.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Tour Canada from space - Liard River Valley, Yukon (354 words)
The blue river, the Liard, winds across the image, suggesting that there is very little change in elevation.
Near the river are oxbow lakes and old meander scars.
The moving water of a river carries more sediment than the still water of the lakes.
Liard River - definition of Liard River in Encyclopedia (156 words)
The Liard River is a river that flows through the Yukon Territory, British Columbia and the Northwest Territories, and in Canada.
The South Nahanni and Fort Nelson rivers are its chief tributaries.
It is navigable to Fort Liard, 165 miles from its mouth.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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