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THE PHYSIOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS OF THE NORTHERN PROVINCIAL FOREST IN SASKATCHEWAN by J .G . Ellis and J .S . Clayton Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology Publication SP3

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Page 1: Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology Publication SP3sis.agr.gc.ca/cansis/publications/surveys/sk/sk14/sk14_report.pdf · 2 Showing the Disposition and General Capability of Lands within

THE PHYSIOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS

OF THE

NORTHERN PROVINCIAL FOREST

IN

SASKATCHEWAN

by

J .G . Ellis and J .S . Clayton

Saskatchewan Institute of PedologyPublication SP3

Page 2: Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology Publication SP3sis.agr.gc.ca/cansis/publications/surveys/sk/sk14/sk14_report.pdf · 2 Showing the Disposition and General Capability of Lands within

The Physiographic Divisions

of the

Northern Provincial Forest

in

Saskatchewan

by

J .G . Ellis and J .S . Clayton

(Rough Draft)

Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology1970

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Acknowledgements

Throughout the lengthy duration of this project financeswere supplied by the following :

The Research Branch, Canada Department of AgricultureThe Saskatchewan Department of AgricultureThe University of Saskatchewan

Assistance provided by the following Departments and individualsis also ackncwledged :

The Directors and personnel of the Forest Branch of theProvincial Department of Natural Resources without whose assistancethis survey would never had been completed . They providedcamping equipment, transportation by water and air, forest covermaps and much knowledge about various areas in the NorthernProvincial Forest .

The Cartographic Section, Soil Research Institute, Ottawafor publishing the map .

The Agrometeorology Section, Plant Research Institute,Ottawa, for the climatic data which appears herein .

Miss . G . Hellstrom for her valuable assistance in the pre-paration of this report .

To our colleague Mr . H .C . Moss for proof reading this report. .And finally, to all present and former members of the

"Saskatchewan Soil Survey" and the student assistants who gatheredinformation relative to this report .

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CONTENTS

Page

1

3

6

Commercial Forest Portion of the Provincial Forest Area . . . . . . . . . . . .

8

Physiographic Divisions of the Northern Provincial Forest . . . . . . . . . .

8

A Churchill River Plains Region . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

10

C Manitoba Lowlands Region . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

13

Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

The Provincial Forest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Cl Westlake Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .C1 .1

Lower Red Deer Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .C1 .2

Overflowing River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .C1 .3

Armit River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

15161819

C2 Cumberland Lake Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

21C2 .1

Saskatchewan Delta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

21

C3 Suggi Lake Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

27C3 .1

Namew Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

27C3 .2

Deschambault Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

29

D Manitoba-Saskatchewan Lowlands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

30

Dl Swan River Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

30D1 .1

Upper Swan River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

31

D2 Carrot River Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

33D2 .1

Torch River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

36D2 .2

Smeaton Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

37D2 .3

Grassy Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

38D2.4

Garrick Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

39D2 .5

Mossy River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

40D2 .6

Weirdal.e Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

41D2 .7

Petaigan Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .g . . . . . . . . . .

42D2.8

Red Earth Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

43D2.9

Melfort Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

45D2.10 White Fox Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

45D2.11 La Corne Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

47D2.12 Nipawin Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

48D2.13 Carrot River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . � . . . . . .

48D2 .14 Saskatchewan Valley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

50D2.15 Upper Red Deer Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

51D2.16 Pasqula Beaches (Agassiz Beaches) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

53D2 .17 Delta Beaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

55

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D3 Lac La Ronge Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D3 .1

Smoothstone River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D3 .2

Montreal River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D3 .3

Bow River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D3 .4

Wapawekka Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D3 .5

Egg lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

D4 Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

E Saskatchewan Plains Region . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

72

E3 Saskatchewan Rivers Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

72E3.1

Paddcckwood Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

74E3.2

Spruze River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75E3 .3

Nisbet Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

76E3.4

Prince Albert Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

77E3 .5

Shell River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

78E3.6

Debden Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

80E3.7

Shellbrook Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

81

E5 White Gull Creek Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

83

E6 Montreal Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

84E6 .1

Bittern Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

85E6.2a Montreal Lake Plain - West Portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

86E6.2b Montreal Lake Plain - East Portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

87

E7 Beaver River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .1

Pierceland Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .2

Goodsoil Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .3

Makwa Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .4

Upper Beaver Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .5

Upper Waterhen Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .6

Keeley Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .7

Dorintosh Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .E7 .8

Meadow Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .9

St . Cyr Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .10 Lower Waterhen Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .11

Beaver Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - - . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .12 Witchekan Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .13

Chitek Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -- . . . . . . .E7 .14 Big River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .o . � . . . . . .E7 .15 Delaronde Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .16 Sled Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . � . . . . . . .E7 .17 Green Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .18

Dore Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .E7 .19 La Plonge Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page

565960606162

636668697071

8890919394969799

100101103104105107108109109110110111

D4 .1 Methy River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D4 . 2 Buffalo River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D4 . 3 Kazan Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D4 . 4 Ile-a-la-Crosse Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .D4. 5 Lower Beaver Valley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Page

E8 Methy Portage Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

111E8 .1

Garson River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

112E8 .2

Clearwater-Churchill Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112

E10 Porcupine Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

113E10 .1 Porcupine Mountain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

114E10 .2 Porcupine Escarpment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115E10 .3 Piwei Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115E10 .4 Nut Mountain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116E10 .5 Greenwater Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

116

Ell Pasquia Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117Ell .! Pasquia Plateau . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118Ell .2 Pasquia Escarpment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119

E12 Wapawekka Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119E12 .1 Wapawekka Plateau . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120E12 .2 Cub hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

121E12 .3 Bear and Cub Escarpment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121E12 .4 Whiteswan Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121E12 .5

Narrow Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

122E12 .6 Nipekamew Valley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

122

E17 Waskesiu Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

122E17 .1 Emma Lake Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124E17 .2 WaSKesiu Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

124E17 .3 Thunder Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

125E17 .4 Dore Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125

F

Alberta High Plains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

126

F6 Thickwood Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . � . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127129129129130130

F7 Mostoos Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131F7 .1

Mostoos Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132F7 .2

Mostoos Escarpment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133F7 .3

Primrose Lake Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

133F7 .4

Dillon River Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134F7 .5

Grizzly Bear Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . .

134

F8 Fire Bag Hills Upland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . � . . . . . . . . .

134

F6 .1 Thickwood Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .F6 .2 Leovilie Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .F6 .3 Bronson-Meadow Lake Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .F6 .4 Beaver Uplands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .F6 .5 Cold Lake Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Page

G

Athabasca River Lowlands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136

G1 Clearwater River Plains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

136G1 .1

Clearwater River Valley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .137G1 .2

Christina River Plain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

138

Reflections on Agricultural Pursuits in the Northern ProvincialForest Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139

Appendix I

Sources of Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150

Appendix 11 Soil Classification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153

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ILLUSTRATIONS

1 Showing the Relative Extent of the Pre-Cambrian Shield,the Provincial or Commercial Forests and theAgricultural and Urban Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

2 Showing Ccmmercial Forest Area in Saskatchewan . . . . . . . . . . . 9

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LIST OF TABLES

1 Showing the Relative Extent of the Three MajorUse Areas of Saskatchewan (in acres) 6

2 Showing the Disposition and General Capability ofLands within the Provincial Forest (in acres) . . . . . . . . . . 7

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Preface

One of the prime objectives of the Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology

(known as the Saskatchewan Soil Survey until 1965) is to compile an inventory

of the soils of the province and evaluate the utilization of this valuable

resource with which Saskatchewan is so richly endowed .

Soil survey work commenced in the province in 1921 and the first

soil survey report was published in 1923 . An inventory of the soils in the

agriculturally settled area of the province was completed with the publication

of the thirteenth soil survey report in 1950 . Thus a reconnaissance type of

soil survey was completed from the southern boundary of the Northern

Provincial Forest to the International border .

Throughout the years, and particularly from the early 1940's to the

mid 1950's, traverses were made throughout those portions of the Northern

Provincial Forest which were accessible . These numerous forays culminated in

the production of a map entitled "Schematic Physiographic and Soil Map of the

Northern Provincial Forest, Saskatchewan" . The map was published in 1960

and accompanies this report . The original purpose was to submit to the public

a report and map entitled Soil Survey Report No . 14 . Due to the initiation of

a soil survey program, which consisted of a revision of Soils Report No . 12,

the preparation of Report No . 14 was curtailed . This factor accompanied by

the demands of A.R.D.A. to prepare land capability maps of the Province has

resulted in the decision of the Institute to prepare the following manuscript

to accompany the schematic map of the Provincial Forests . The Institute,

under the sponsorship of A .R .D .A ., is at present preparing land capability maps

of the Provincial Forest of Saskatchewan . The results of this program will

contain more factual soils information than is contained in this manuscript,

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because of the limited traverses which were made to prepare the accompanying

schematic map .

The Institute will be preparing a series of reports and maps of the

Provincial Forest areas as they occur on the various map sheets indexed by

the National Topographic System . Thus more factual and detailed soils

information in the forested area is forthcoming . Therefore, the present

manuscript is basically an interim report to assist in the preparation of

more knowledgeable reports concerning the Northern Provincial Forests of

Saskatchewan .

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forestry and mining .

controlled by a

boundary of the

these two areas from

ajustments have been

the areas concerned .

Introduction

Saskatchewan is slightly less than four hundred miles wide at its

base on the 49th parallel (International Boundary between Canada and U .S .A .

in Saskatchewan) and tapers to a width of about three hundred miles at the

60th parallel 750 miles to the north . The total area is some 161 million

acres of which about 8% is water surface .

Saskatchewan has developed through a series of events which has

created, from south to north, three major activities, namely, agriculture,

The limit of the agricultural area to the north is

Provincial Act passed in 1950 which defines the southern

Provincial Forest . There have been some adjustments between

time to time but the important point is that these

preceded by a careful appraisal of the best use for

This has prevented any haphazard developments such as

occurred in some areas during the earlier years of development,

since there are some 27,000,000 acres of forest land between the margin of

the agricultural area and the Pre-Cambrian Shield various groups of the

public, and Governmental agencies invariably inquire, from time to

(depending on the expected advantages

portion of this forest area may be suitable for agriculture .

From information gathered to date and recorded in this manuscript it

seems unlikely that cultivation will extend much further into the forest

area . The main reason for such a statement is the poor quality of the

A second reason is that there is a good prospect of

utilizing the natural crop (trees) so that the area may be made more productive

for the development and maintenance of present and future forest industries,

soils in the area .

However,

time,

to be gained) whether or not a

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4

Notwithstanding there is some land which could be cultivated but this would

occur in relatively small blocks which are not very economic to develop and

which would likely lead to greater fire and erosional hazards within the

forest area . If more agricultural land is requ:.red in the Province some

thought should be given to the development of the so-called Saskatchewan

River Delta, or evaluating the additional acreage which may be cultivated

on presently occupied lands particularly in the park belt of Saskatchewan .

It is of significance to note that specialists assessing the productivity

of land presently utilized for agricultural production suggest that yields

could be increased some 327. by the judicious use of fertilizer alone . Even

without the use of correct fertilizers significant increase could be secured

if proper moisture conservation, disease control, weed control and farm

management practices were applied .

As mentioned previously Saskatchewan consists of three regions of

human activity and enterprise which correspond to the three major areas of

land use namely the Pre-Cambrian Shield, the Provincial Forest and the

Agricultural and Urban Area . These areas, in general, are mutually exclusive,

but there are some small developments of settlements along the waterways

within the Provincial Forest and on the Pre-Cambrian Shield . The relative

location of these three major areas is illustrated in Figure 1 and their

relative extent is indicated by the data in Table 1 which indicate that the

Pre-Cambrian Shield, the Provincial Forest and the Agricultural and Urban

Areas constitute 39 .2, 16 .7 and 44 .1 per cent respectively of the total

area of the province .

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'Let

0- t .

~T'�~pa,~,tv~y -C4~L Yelg7~ .c7(, QXte'w7t

o~ tL~L

'M% eCh~W U..V~1Q,~ Ay" .

LEGEND

1. Brown

Soils

of t he

openprairie, the most arid sectionof the province . Wide vari-ations in crop yields andfrequent sever droughts .

2. Dark Brown Soils of theprairie, less arid than theBrown Soils. Variable cropyields but less frequentsevere droughts .

3. Black Soils of the parkland .Better moisture conditionsand better average yieldsthan on ,the prairie . Severedroughts rarely experienced .

4. Thick Black and Dark GreySoils of the parkland-forestbelt. Good moisture condi-tions and high crop yields.

5. Grey Wooded Soils withinagricultural region .

6. Grey Wooded, Podzolic andMuskeg Soils of the Com-mercial Forest Region .

7. Podzolic and Muskeg Soilswith rock outcrops of theNorthern Coniferous Forest(Precambrian Shield).

8. Podzolic, Muskeg and Forest-Tundra Soils of the NorthernTransition Forest .//////// Boundary betweenagricultural regions and pro.vincial forest reserves .

''Prepaced by the SaskatcbewaaSoil Survey, December, 1963 .

tv~c®"" u~.yYeak 3l,� ~td,

a.,,A tL.` A%V,-L_tt-V .4

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the forest area to latitude

Shield which extends to the

of no consequence, however,

6 -

Table 1 . Showing the Relative Extent of the Three MajorUse Areas of Saskatchewan (in acres)

Total area of Saskatchewan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161,088,000'_.and Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140,916,000Water Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

20,172,000The Pre-Cambrian Shield Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63,000,000

Land Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Water Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Provincial Forest Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Land Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Water Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Agricultural and Urban Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Land Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Water Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

T ., , --- ,17,000,00027,000,00024,600,0002,400,000

71,000,00070,500,000

500,000

report is basically a schematic oneThe map which accompanies this

illustrating the physiographic regions

Forest Area of Saskatchewan . The map extends from the southern boundary of

570 N thus eliminating much of the Pre-Cambrian

top of the province at latitude 600 N . This is

as the present report is specifically concerned

with the Provincial Forest Area .

and soils of the Northern Provincial

The Provincial Forest l

The general disposition of the 24,600,000 acres of lands within the

Provincial Forest Area are indicated in Table 2 . These lands are, in

general, located between the northern edge of the Agricultural Area and

the southern limits of the Pre-Cambrian Shield .

LW .L . Hutcheon, J .S . Clayton and D .A . Rennie . Saskatchewan's Land Resource .Department of Soil Science and Saskatchewan Soil Survey, University ofSaskatchewan, Saskatoon .

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Table 2 . Showing the Disposition and General Capabilityof Lands Within the Provincial Forest (in acres) 2

Estimated area of commercial forest . . . . . . . . . 9,700,000Estimated area of non-commercial forest . . . . . 14,900,000Areas of deep peat and muskeg within the

non-commercial forest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8,000,000Potentially fair to good arable lands but

requiring drainage or heavy clearing . . . . . .

1,440,000Potentially fair to poor arable lands . . . . . . . 1,560,000

The above classifications of land capability refer to the potential

for production of cultivated crops

based on the known characteristics of the soils together with the results of

past experience on somewhat comparable lands within the present Agricultural

Area .

Approximately 21,600,000 acres, or 87 .8 per cent of the lands within

the Provincial. Forest Area are considered to be non-arable for the production

of cultivated crops . They are generally lands of steep slopes, excessive

stoniness, or coarse texture, together with extensive local areas of deep

organic soils (peat bogs) . There are undoubtedly small local areas of

potentially arable land scattered throughout the major areas of the above

types . Many of the better drained lands of coarse texture are also quite

acid and low in native fertility . The 8,000,000 acres of peat lands occur

throughout the lower lying areas of the

unproductive for trees and also present

development . It is likely that drainage

low relief of the general landscape, and

the peats have developed from sphagnum mosses, the organic materials are

rather than trees . The evaluation is

Forest . They are, in general,

many problems for agricultural

would be difficult because of the

in many areas, particularly where

2Dept . of Natural Resources, Saskatchewan's Forests .

1955 .

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3

usually very acid .

It is considered that there may be a potential of 3,000,000 acres of

arable lands within the Provincial Forest Area . Major areas are located along

the northern edges of the Pasquia and Porcupine Hills and in the flood plain

between the Saskatchewan and Carrot Rivers . Smaller areas also occur in the

general vicinity of Green and Dorif Lakes .

The development of these lands

requi-res extensive drainage in some cases, and the clearing of extensive

stands of trees over the remainder . Further, more detailed study is required

to determine the exact character and extent of these lands, and to determine

their best use under present and future conditions .

Commercial Forest Portion of the Provincial Forest Areal

The Commercial Forest in Saskatchewan provides the locale for

practically all the logging operations in the province and as the name

implies accounts for most of the forest products harvested . It occupies

some 27 million acres about half-way up in the province and occurs in a

band approximately 200 miles wide which stretches from the Alberta to the

Manitoba border. The location of the Commercial Forest Region and its extent

to other vegetative zones in the province is illustrated in Figure 2 .

Physiographic Divisions of the Northern Provincial Forest

The Schematic Map of the Northern Provincial Forest illustrates the

boundaries of the Physiographic Divisions which were separated, and identifies

each by a symbol which consists of a letter and numbers . This symbol is

given a geographic name in the legend . The major Soil Units within each

1 W.R. Parks . Forest Inventory, Present Use, and Policies in Effect .Saskatchewan Resources Conference, Sackatoon . January 20-21, 1964.

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Iloe

SA5KATCHEWANVEGETATION ZONES

soze

~

\41SV,

-~rRanr~..\, s~I-

- -MON7APiA

NOR7F4 QAKO7A~te~48e

00

p

SCALE IN. MILg9

I

\G!K\'G ~.~ S% Ghw.N4ty(4A, lOY61, "C

S~veu

~d a-1~!~'aW(`CV"f.'~.7~r~

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- LO -

Physiographic Division are. given a color .

The significance of the color is

described in the legend . The remainder of this manuscript consists of

information, which it is hoped will indicate the significance of the Physio-

graphic Divisions which appear on the map .

A. Churchill River Plains Region

Location

This Region represents the southern portion of the Canadian Shield

in Saskatchewan . Its southern boundary crosses the province in an arc which

enters the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border at approximately 540 30' N and leaves

the Alberta-Saskatchewan border at approximately 570 45' N . From this southern

boundary it extends northward throughout the entire map area .

Landforms

Mainly consists of roughly undulating to rolling plains with a general

elevation of from 950 to 1,760 feet, with minor relief which rarely exceeds

60 feet . Glaciation has caused scouring and plucking resulting in a rounded

uneven terrain interspersed with many deep irregularly shaped lakes containing

many islands . Some morainic ridges of glacial till and outwash occur as well

as drumlins and eskers . Alluvial fans occur on some major waterways and

lacustrine clay basins occur in some depressional areas .

Drainage

The drainage is mainly to the Churchill Drainage system which empties

into the Hudson Bay Basin .

The northern portion of the Pre-Cambrian (which

is not shown on the map) drains into the Mackenzie Drainage system which

empties into the Arctic Basin .

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Climate

The mean January temperature is between -6 and -loo F, the mean July

temperature is between 61 and 620 F, and the mean annual temperature is

between 27 and 310 F .

The growing season commences between April 30 and May 10 and ends

between October I and October 6, therefore its length is between 149 and 154

days .

The last spring frost is around June 20 and the first fall frost

between August 20 and September 10, thus there are between 60 to 80 frost-free

days .

The annual precipitation is 16 to 18 inches of which between 10 and

l1 inches fall between May and September .

Soils

The soils are mainly Orthic Regosols (Lithosols) developed on

consolidated rock or rock fragments of Paleozoic and Pre-Cambrian origin .

In local areas there are also Podzolic and Organic soils .

Soil development is shallow due to the presence of bedrock which

occurs as exposures over large portions of the area . Locally, Regosolic and

weak Podzolic soils are found, (on the better drained sites) on thin deposits

of stony or gravelly sandy materials overlying bedrock. Depressional areas

are mainly Organic soils of varying depths and some pockets of poorly drained

clay soils occur in the southeast corner .

In the northwest corner Organic

and Podzolic soils occur on coarse textured glacial till, glacio-fluvial

and sandy-alluvial deposits .

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V egetationl

Black Spruce (Picea mariana) is the predominant tree, forming stands

on thin soils of the uplands as well as on poorly drained lowlands, and

associated on these. two positions with Jack Pine (Pines banksiana) and

Tamarack (Larix laricina), respectively .

Resource Evaluation

The Churchill River Plains section of the Shield is considered an

unproductive area both for agriculture and forestry. This is due to the

shallow coarse textured soils,-the bedrock exposures, and the muskeg areas,

which when coupled with the adverse climatic characteristics of the area,

limit growth and economic production .

"The complex of igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic Pre-Cambrian

rocks of northern Saskatchewan are the host rocks for Saskatchewan's metallic

mineral industry . Sites of commercial production of metallic minerals and

the areas considered most favorable for further finds are in a belt extending

west from Flin Flon to Lac La Ronge and north to Reindeer Lake and in the

region north of Lake Athabasca . All of northern Saskatchewan must be

considered potential mineral land, but, because of the complexity of the

rock structure and physical limitations imposed by the terrain, discovery

of mineral deposits will require many years of prospecting" 2 .

The potential of wildlife production may be considered as fair.

Trapping forms one of the main revenue sources for local inhabitants with

l J .S . Rowe . Forest Region of Canada . Department of Northern Affairs andNatural Resources . Forestry Branch - Bulletin 123 .

2"Inventory and Outlook of Saskatchewan's Mineral Resources" . ProceedingsResources for People . Saskatchewan Resources Conference . January 20-21,1964. Saskatoon .

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and Carrot

where they

bedrock .

some development of commercial fishing. These activities are largely

centred around local communities adjacent to lakes and rivers .

Recreation, particularly sport fishing and some big game

becoming a developing resource but it is largely limited to areas where

development of roads and air routes provide convenient access, however,

considerable strides in recreational development have been made .

The Central Lowlands Province of North America

C . Manitoba Lowlands Region

Location

The Manitoba Lowlands occupy the lowest portion of the Central Lowlands

in elevation from approximately 1,200

point, the latter elevation being that

where it crosses the Manitoba border.

The western

limits of the area coincide with the base of a series of beach ridges which

represent some of the shorelines of Glacial Lake Agassiz . These beaches

extend from the Manitoba border north of the Porcupine Hills, across the Red

Deer Valley, around the Pasquia Hills escarpment, across the lower Saskatchewan

River Valleys, and northward to a position west of Suggi Lake

become more indistinct in the region of limestone outcrops along

the border of the Canadian Shield . From this area the lowlands extend in a

northwesterly direction to a point west of Ballantyne Bay on Deschambault Lake,

thus including the areas considered to be directly underlain by limestone

The northern boundary of the Lowland is determined by the contact

between the Paleozoic outcrops and the Canadian Shield .

in eastern Saskatchewan with a range

feet to below 850 feet at its lowest

of the Saskatchewan River

hunting, is

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- 14 -

Landforms

These Lowlands form a very gently sloping to flat plain of thin

glacial and alluvial lacustrine deposits overlying a subsurface of very

gently dipping beds of Paleozoic limestones and some Lower Cretaceous sands .

Local morainic till deposits form small scattered areas of higher relief

within the plain .

Drainage

The area is generally poorly drained and the soils and vegetation

reflect these conditions . A characteristic feature of the region is the

frequent occurrence of many smooth shaped, or rounded lakes, probably similar

to the "Karst" or "Sinkhole" lakes which occur in other regions underlain by

limestone beds . External drainage is effected through the Saskatchewan

and its tributaries, the Grassberry and Carrot Rivers, and by the Overflowing

and Red Deer Rivers which form part of the Nelson drainage .

Vegetation

The prevailing vegetation on the flat poorly drained land consists

of forest patches of Black Spruce (Picea mariana) and Tamarack (Larix laricina),

with intervening swamps and meadows . Good stands of White Spruce (Picea glauca),

Aspen (Populus tremuloides) and Balsam Poplar (P . balsamifera), sometimes in

mixtures with Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea), and White Birch (Betula papyrifera),

occur on the better-drained alluvial strips bordering rivers and creeks . Low

ridges throughout are generally forested with Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) or

Aspen . Also present locally are Elm (Ulmus americana), Green Ash (Fraxinus

pennsylvanica var. subintegerrima), Manitoba Maple (Acer negundo var. interius)

and Eastern White Cedar (Thuja occidentalis) .

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Divisions Within the Manitoba Lowlands

The area has been divided into three physiographic sections and six

subsections or mapping units based on differing features of relief, parent

material, and soils . The descriptions of the divisions within the Manitoba

Lowlands immediately follows this section . Some of the divisions have been

the subject of previous Soil Survey Reports . The Saskatchewan Delta subsection

of the Cumberland Lake Lowland, C2 .1, has been dealt with in the "Soil Survey

of the Cumberland house Area", in 1951, and in the "Report on the Soils of

the Lower Saskatchewan Valley", in 1952 . The Lower Red Deer Plain, C1 .1,

the Armit River Plain, C1 .3, and the southern portions of the Overflowing

River Plain, C1 .2, all subsections of the Westlake Lowland, C1, are described

in the "Preliminary Soil Survey of the Lower Red Deer River Basin in

Saskatchewan", printed in 1950 . These reports should be referred to for

fuller descriptions of soil conditions .

The Suggi Lake Section includes those areas of the Manitoba Lowland

extending north of the Saskatchewan Delta to the Canadian Shield, and includes

those areas in which the influence of limestone bedrock is most noticeable .

Cl Westlake Lowland

The Westlake Lowland represents the first division made within the

Manitoba Lowland Region . The Westlake Lowland contains three subsections ;

namely, C1 .1, the Lower Red Deer Plain, C1 .2, the Overflowing River Plain

and, C1 .3, the Armit River Plain .

Each of these subsections are discussed

separately but a summary of the climate common to the areas included in the

Westlake Lowland are presented here .

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Climate

The mean January temperature for the Westlake Lowland is between

-2 and -4° F, its mean July temperature is between 63 and 650 F and its mean

annual temperature is between 33 and 340 F.

The growing season starts between April 30 and May 5 and ends between

October 6 and October 11 so, therefore, it varies between 154 and 165 days .

The last spring frost is between June 10 and June 20 and the first

fall frost between August 20 and September 2 . Thus there are between 80

and 90 frost-free days .

The annual precipitation is 16 to 18 inches with 10-11 inches

falling from May to September.

C1 .1 Lower Red Deer Plain

Location

The Lower Red Deer Plain, C1 .1, is located in the Westlake section

of the Manitoba Lowlands, lying below the main beaches of Glacial Lake

Agassiz south of the Pasquia River, and flanked to the south and west by

the escarpments of the Porcupine and Pasquia Hills . The elevations of

this portion of the shallow lake plain lie between 1,050 and 1,220 feet . It

includes those areas of alluvial silts and sands which were deposited in the

Agassiz lake plain by the Red Deer River during its early post-glacial

development . A portion of the area lies outside the provincial forest

boundaries and is described more fully in the "Preliminary Soil Survey of

the Lower Red Deer River Basin in Saskatchewan" .

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- 17 -

Landforms

Level to very gently undulating topography occurs through most of the

marginal lake plain, broken by a few low stony or gravelly ridges which may

be recessional moraines with overlying beach deposits . Roughly undulating

topography occurs adjacent to the eroded slopes of the Red Deer River Valley .

Local areas of level to gently undulating alluvial bottom land occur adjacent

to the river .

Soils

The soils on the marginal lake plain are mostly developed on medium

to fine textured silty lacustrine and calcareous till deposits, with some

areas of sandy alluvial deposition and local stony and gravelly deposits on

the ridges . On moderately well drained lacustrine and till sites, Rego and

Calcareous Dark Gray (Wooded Calcareous), Orthic Dark Gray with some Dark

Gray Wooded soils occur. Thin Peaty Humic Gleysols, usually carbonated, and

Peaty Eluviated Gleysols occur in the poorly drained areas . These soils are

correlated with the Erwood, Weirdale, Etomami and Tisdale Associations (Soil.

Survey Report No . 13) . On medium coarse sandy alluvial deposits the soil

profiles vary from thin Peaty Humic and Eluviated Gleysols in the poorly

drained sites to Calcareous Dark Gray in the imperfectly to moderately well

drained, and to Gray Wooded profiles in well drained positions . These soils

are correlated with the Carrot River and La Corne Associations . Podzolic

sands and gravels (Pine and Bodmin Associations) are found on local alluvial-

aeolian and coarse outwash deposits, while Gray Wooded and Dark Gray Wooded

stony soils are found on the low morainic ridges . (Kakwa and Etomami stony

phase) .

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Resource Evaluation

With the exception of the local areas of Kakwa, Bodmin and Pine soils,

the soils may be regarded as fair to good agricultural types providing adequate

drainage is established and suitable methods of handling peaty soils are

adopted .

Agricultural development of the area has proceeded slowly, mainly

due to inadequate drainage during wet periods .

The area has very limited potential for commercial forestry, with

the exception of local Jack Pine stands .

The recreational development of the area is limited . Some sport

fishing can be enjoyed along the Red Deer River . The wildlife potential

is fair to good with a productive and varied habitat .

C1 .2 Overflowing River Plain

Location

The Overflowing River Plain extends from the Manitoba border on the

east to the Pasquia beach ridges on the west, and lies between the Lower Red

Deer Plain on the south and the alluvial lands of the Saskatchewan and

Pasquia delta to the north.

Landform

The Overflowing River Plain forms part of the marginal lake plain of

Lake Agassiz and is characterized by a succession of narrow sandy ridges or

boulder beaches with broad areas of intervening wet bogs . Very little well

drained land occurs in the area .

Soils

The bog areas include deep fibrous (sedge) and (sphagnum) mossy peats

overlying variable glacial alluvial-lacustrine (sandy to medium textured)

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deposits . It should be mentioned that this area of bog soil extends eastward

into Manitoba to as far as Lake Winnipegosis and the morainic ridge along

which the highway runs from Swan Rive : - to The Pas . Some areas of very stony

limestone till are also believed to occur . Rego and Calcareous Dark Gray

Chernozemic (wooded calcareous) to Podzolic sandy soils occur on the narrow

ridges and beach deposits . Limited areas of Dark Gray Chernozemic soils on

alluvial deposits may occur adjacent to streams such as the Overflowing River.

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered to be non-arable because of the dominance of

thick peat and moss soils, and because of the economics of large scale drainage .

Very few stands of merchantable timber occur, and hence this area is generally

considered to be not suitable for commercial forestry.

The potential for recreational and wildlife development is limited .

C1 .3 Armit River Plain

Location

This local area includes that portion of the Westlake Lowland lying

between the Lower Red Deer Plain and the main beach ridges of Lake Agassiz

marking the northern edge of the Porcupine Escarpment . It lies partly

within the Porcupine Forest Reserve .

Landform

The Armit River Plain forms part of a marginal lake plain extending into

Manitoba and is characterized by a succession of long narrow sandy-gravelly or

stony beach deposits with intervening areas of very gently sloping to flat,

poorly drained peat bogs and wooded muskegs . The narrow beach ridges may be

recessional moraines . Some local alluvial-lacustrine deposits occur adjacent

to the Armit River and other minor tributaries of the Red Deer River.

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- 20 -

Soils

Mixed peaty meadows and fibrous and sphagnum peats are the dominant

soils and are found through most of the area . The fibrous (sedge) peats

vary in thickness from less than 12 to over 50 inches, but are commonly from

20 to 30 inches thick . They are usually fairly well decomposed and are

neutral to slightly acidic in reaction . They are frequently underlain by a

muck-mineral layer, which in turn overlies a mottled and usually calcareous

mineral layer. These mineral subsurface layers are variable and include

sandy alluvial, lacustrine clay and lake modified stony calcareous till

deposits .

The sphagnum (mossy) peats are characterized by a fairly shallow depth

of raw sphagnum . The lower horizons are partially decomposed peats of fibrous

and sphagnum origin . These deposits are rarely over 50 inches in thickness

and are moderately to highly acidic in reaction . The sedge peats are usually

found under a relatively open stand of sedge, willows and swamp birch with

some Black Spruce . The sphagnum peats are associated with a treed muskeg

vegetation of Tamarack and Black Spruce . Rego and Calcareous Dark Gray (Wooded

Calcareous) and Dark Gray Wooded profiles are found on the moderately well

drained sites which sustain a good mixed-wood tree cover . Shallow peaty

meadow soils occur on the poorly drained positions in the alluvial-lacustrine

soils adjacent to the Armit River . These two groups are comparable to soils

of the Weirdale and Carrot River Associations . Thin Orthic Gray Wooded and

Dark Gray Wooded profiles, comparable to the Bodmin, Glenbush and Kakwa

Associations, have developed on the coarse textured outwash and stony tills

of the beach ridges .

Local areas of Dark Gray Chernozemic soils on lake

modified glacial till occur and these may be correlated with the Erwood

Association .

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Resource Evaluation

The small areas of moderately well drained soils near the hamlet of

Armit have been cultivated successfully, and where local drainage can be

effected some successful agricultural development of the shallower peat soils

has also been undertaken where the subsoil is suitable . Apart from these,

the majority o£ the soils must be considered as not suitable for development

because of the thickness of the organic deposits and the great difficulties

to be overcome in attempting to drain the interbeach areas . The agriculturally

developed portion of the area is discussed in the "Preliminary Soil Survey of

the Lower Red Deer River Basin in Saskatchewan" .

The area has commercial timber . Productive stands of mixed-wood occur

on moderately well drained alluvial soils but most of the poorly drained areas

support stands of stunted Black Spruce and Tamarack . Open bog areas with

little tree cover are common .

The recreational potential is limited, but the varied habitat should

be favourable to wildlife development .

C2 Cumberland Lake Lowland

C2 .1 Saskatchewan Delta

The Saskatchewan Delta is the only subsection in the Cumberland Lake

Lowland Region of Saskatchewan . A report entitled "Preliminary Soil Survey

of the Saskatchewan River Delta Project" gives an account of the pertinent

features of a large portion of this area . This report is available from the

Conservation and Development Branch, Administration Building, Regina .

Location

The Saskatchewan Delta occupies the broad, level to very gently

sloping, flood plain of the Saskatchewan River and its tributaries the Carrot,

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and Birch Rivers .

The elevations vary from 920 feet at Kennedy Creek in the

west to about 850 feet near The Pas in Manitoba, a fall of about 70 feet in

as many miles . A few "islands" of morainic till rise above the flood plains .

The Pas moraine,at an elevation of approximately 930 feet,marks the eastern

boundary of the area .

Landforms

Glaciation presumably scoured the preglacial surface down to the

limestone bedrock and later deposited a shallow, discontinuous layer of

stony, calcareous till over the surface . Lacustrine clay deposits, contemporary

with stages of Lake Agassiz, were laid down over the glacial surface. The

subsequent geological development of the area has been influenced by the

activity of the Saskatchewan and Carrot Rivers in cutting through and across

the lacustrine and till plain, depositing alluvial sediments in lower areas

by filling old lakes, cutting new channels, and by building delta and levee

deposits on the flood plains . These activities are still proceeding in the

area . Delta and mud flats are developing, particularly in the Cumberland Laks

area, and the rivers frequently overflow into the interior building up higher

levee deposits along their banks and depositing fresh alluvium in the

interior plains .

Climate

The area has a mean January temperature between -2 and -40 F, a mean

July temperature between 64 and 66° F, and a mean annual temperature between

32 and 330 F. The growing season commences between April 30 and May 5 and

ends between October 6 and 11 . Thus there are between 154 and 165 days in

the growing season . The last spring frost occurs between June 1 and 10 and

the first fall frost occurs between September 1 and 10 . Therefore, the area

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has between 90 and 100 frost-free days .

The annual precipitation is between 16 and 18 inches with 10 to 11

inches falling from May to September of which the greatest portion falls in

June, July and August hampering haying and other agricultural operations .

Vegetation

The vegetation and soils in the area reflect the above conditions .

The vegetative pattern is characteristic of the ecological successions which

occur on a slowly draining flood plain within the forest region . These

successions may be very closely correlated with the maturity of soils

developed in the area .

Two vegetative patterns are associated with this development, a marsh,

meadow and bog association, and the other a mixed-wood forest pattern . Sedges,

willows, cattails and various reed grasses are the dominant vegetation of the

poorly drained alluvial and meadow lands . Very wet or flooded meadow bogs

support sedges and marsh grasses, while intermittently or shallow flooded areas

may support sedges and grasses with clumps of willows . Some areas of birch

and willow are found in association with sphagnum moss bogs .

Older and better drained alluvial sites,which are no longer subject

to periodic deposition or flooding,have developed a mixed-wood vegetation of

Aspen, Black Poplar or Spruce, with a dense understory of shrubs, and in some

areas older stands of pure soft wood stands of Spruce and Balsam Fir .

Likewise

older and longer established poorly drained sites have developed a Black

Spruce and Tamarack cover with an undergrowth of Sphagnum Mosses over the

original decomposed sedge cover. Some areas of pure Black Spruce and Feather

Moss have developed on former sphagnum bogs .

Where the levee banks are very low the course of the streams are fringed

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Green Ash, Manitoba Maple

The percentages of Spruce

highest . The undergrowth

ferns and bushy shrubs, including Dogwood .

Soils

The pattern of soils exhibit a trend to an increase in profile

development from the most recently exposed deposits to progressively better

drained and more mature sites . In the poorly drained and wet areas

developing under a range of marsh, meadow and bog vegetation on

and lacustrine deposits, resulting in a group of weakly developed Orthic and

Rego Gleysol types, which only partially reflect the influence of regional

of thin peaty meadow, thin peat (mor

peat alluvium organic regosol (rego gleysols) soils are

drained soils may be correlated to the organic regosols .

mostly highly calcareous, silty clay to clay types and

the Cumberland House Association .

In some wet areas

within the delta, not subject to frequent flood deposition from the river,

deep organic fibrous and sphagnum peat soils have developed .

the Ravendale Association in previous reports .

Along levee banks, and in portions of the lake plain which have become

sufficiently drained to support tree growth, soils are developing under a

surface leaf litter with conditions conducive to the early stages of

podzolization, giving rise to mull and mor Regosols, Rego, Calcareous, and

0 rthic Dark Gray and even to very slightly podzolized types in older and more

are

climate . The formation

thin

this group . Better

Many of these soils are

have been mapped within

described as

24 -

with Willows, but as the levees become higher and less subject to periodic

inundation, they support a luxuriant growth of hardwood trees, mostly Elm,

and Black Poplar with an occasional Spruce or Aspen .

and Aspen increases westward where the levees are

of these levees is usually very dense with many

the soils

alluvial

regosols) and

represented in

These have been

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mature sites . The Rego Dark Gray and mor Regosol soils, on alluvial deposits,

have been included within the Sipanok Association in the delta area . They

are dominantly very fine sandy clay loam to silty clay in texture but some

very fine sandy loams to loamy sands occur in sandy levee and delta areas .

They are typically dark surface soils, with 0 (Ao) and L-H and Ah, Ahe, (Al)

horizons with considerable incorporation of mor humus varying from 3 to over

12 inches in depth, and usually free of lime carbonates . These Ah horizons

are underlain by highly calcareous alluvial layers . Little or no evidence

of the development of a lime free, colored B horizon may be found in most

Sipanok soils .

Soils on similar parent material, but showing early stages of podzolic

development in the A horizons, and occurring under more mature forest

vegetation have been referred to as the Mountain Cabin Association, but are

classified in this report with the Sipanok soils as Rego Dark Gray or

Calcareous Dark Gray Chernozemic types . They are similar to the Sipanok in

being A/C profiles with no . or little color B development, but have indications

of a dark gray granular (Ahe) horizon usually about 2 inches thick, and

occurring beneath a thick L-H (Ao) horizon .

Other soils of local importance are found in the area .

Thin O rthic

Gray Wooded and Gray Podzolic as well as stony and gritty loam soils are found

on calcareous stony till of morainic origin under heavy spruce growth . They

are comparable to the Westray soils as mapped in the Pasquia area in Manitoba,

and are similar to some of the shallow Kakwa soils as described in Saskatchewan .

They may be considered non-arable due to their excessively stony condition .

A few areas of Orthic Gray Wooded profiles on fine textured lake modified

clays overlying stony till are found in association with these Kakwa soils

on Cumberland Island .

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Resource Evaluation

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The land utilization and agricultural development of the Saskatchewa.)

Delta has been discussed at length in the report on the Soils of the Lower

Saskatchewan Valley . The possibility of agricultural development depends

primarily on the feasibility of drainage and flood control, the possibilities

of which have been increased greatly by the construction of the Squaw Rapids

Dam . If "it(, can be effected, a large percentage of the more than 600,000

acres in the delta may be considered as potentially arable and suitable for

development. The relatively well drained Sipanok soils with their high

organic matter content, and the Cumberland soils if drained, should be at

least comparable in productivity to other similar alluvial soils at present

cultivated in Saskatchewan, such as the Pike Lake and St. Louis flats on the

South Saskatchewan River . This has been demonstrated on a limited scale on

Cumberland Island . Some utilization of the native meadows for hay production

has been made, particularly along the Sipanok Channel and adjacent to the

Indian Reserves and Metis settlements .

Considerable lumbering occurred on the well forested levee soils

during early years, but these are of limited acreage . These soils include

some of the best forested areas in Saskatchewan . The more poorly drained

soils support little tree growth, and may be considered as non commercial

areas for forestry .

Long established Indian and Metis settlements occur at Cumberland

House, and . a t certain Indian Reservations within the Delta .

The population

have made a continuing but rather precarious living from fur, fish, and a

limited development of lumbering from this and adjacent forested regions .

The recreational potential of the area is limited.

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C3 Suggi Lake Lowland

The Suggi Lake Lowland in Saskatchewan is subdivided in two sections,

the Namew Lake Plain and the Deschambault Lake Plain .

The climate for the

Region is summarized as follows . The mean January temperature is between -4

and -loo F, the mean July temperature between 64 and 660 F, and the mean

annual temperature between 31 and 320 F . The growing season starts between

April 30 and May 5 and ends between October 1 and 6, thus there are between

154 and 165 days in the growing season . The last spring frost occurs between

June 1 and 10 and the first fall frost between September 1 and 10, therefore,

there are between 90 and 100 frost-free days . The annual precipitation is

between 16 and 18 inches of which between 10 and 12 inches occur between

May and September.

C3 .1 Namew Lake Plain

Location

This area extends from the Saskatchewan Delta near Cumberland and

Pinebluff Lakes, northward to Suggi and Amisk Lakes and the Canadian Shield .

It is imperfectly drained by the Grassberry and Sturgeon-Weir Rivers . The

Plains form part of the lowland region where the influence of the flat to

gently sloping limestone bedrock is very marked, but it is differentiated

from the Deschambault Plain to the west in being within the areas known to

be influenced by local clay deposits of Lake Agassiz .

Landform

It may be considered as a level to very gently sloping marginal lake

plain lying at a general elevation below 1,000 feet . Numerous round or smooth

shaped lakes occur, characterized by outcrops of limestone forming low

escarpments particularly on the south and southwest edges of the lakes . These

escarpments, together with local higher areas of stony glacial moraine and a

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few minor beach ridges, break the otherwise flat relief . This low relief,

and the proximity to impervious limestone bedrock, has contributed largely

to the poor drainage of much of the area .

Soils

The soils are developed on parent materials varying from shallow

deposits of stony limestone till or gravelly outwash overlying bedrock to

very local areas of lacustrine and alluvial clays .

are very limited in Saskatchewan but increase

Some alluvial deposits are

Grassberry River and alluvial and lacustrine clays are found adjacent

between Amisk Lake and Sturgeon Landing .

is mostly poorly drained with a predominance of deep

fibrous sedge pests overlying variable deposits . These

are broken by a few discontinuous narrow ridges of outwash

boulder till with thin Pray Wooded and

eastward, particularly between Cumberland,

the proportion of moderately well drained soils increases, Ix and Orthic Gray

Wooded soils on shallow stony till and local clay pockets occur .

soils are also underlain by limestone bedrock at shallow depths . In areas

where the glacial deposits are very thin or bedrock outcrops occur, the

profiles are usually thin, immature Podzolic or Rego Dark Gray Chernozemic

types .

Resource Evaluation

With the exception of the local areas of podzolized clays, and the

Sturgeon Landing where there

agricultural development, the majority of the soils are considered to be

non-arable . This is because of the dominance of deep peats in the poorly

area of Manitoba .

Sturgeon-Weir River

portion of the area

sphagnum (moss) and

boggy areas

gravels and

Further

thin peats occurring near

Zg

These local clay areas

in distribution in the Wanless

known to occur adjacent to the

to the

The western

sandy Podzolic profiles .

Sturgeon and Amisk Lakes,

is a limited

These

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drained areas and very stony Gray Wooded soils on the better drained sites .

The shallow soils with proximity to hard (flat lying) bedrock are almost

impossible to drain and the occurrence of limestone outcrops are also serious

obstacles to cultivation .

Very little merchantable timber occurs except on the alluvial

lacustrine areas, and the recreational and wildlife potential is limited .

C3 .2 Deschambault Lake Plain

Location

This plain comprises the northwestern section of the Manitoba Lowland

extending from Suggi Lake to west of Ballantyne Bay on Deschambault Lake, with

the Canadian Shield forming the northern boundary. It is similar in many

respects to the Namew Lake Plain but has been separated from it because it

lies to the west of the main Agassiz beach ridges and lacks evidence of local

lacustrine clay deposits . In addition, the presence of limestone .outcrops

and escarpments are more in evidence, particularly on the south sides of

Ballantyne Bay and Limestone Lake where the Paleozoic beds overlap and abut

the Pre-Cambrian Shield .

Landform

The area is characteristic of the ice scoured gently sloping Paleozoic

Plain modified by thin discontinuous deposits of limestone and Pre-Cambrian

glacial drift . Some modified fluvial deposits with intervening gravelly and

stony beach ridges indicate post glacial marginal lakeshore activity . With

the exception of local roughly undulating morainic till deposits, limestone

outcroppings, and glacial ridges, the area has little relief and is poorly

drained .

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Soils

- 30 -

Soil information is lacking for the area, but shallow Gray Wooded

profiles are believed to occur on much of the stony till deposits, with

thin weakly developed Regosolic profiles occurring on the shattered limestone

and outcrops . Deep mossy and sedge peats are apparently dominant in the

poorly XXXXXX drained bogs, and sandy Podzolic soils on the beach ridges .

Resource Evaluation

There is no evidence to suggest any significant areas as suitable

for agricultural development and the forest inventory maps indicate little

potential merchantable timber except in limited and isolated areas .

D Manitoba-Saskatchewan Lowlands

The Manitoba-Saskatchewan Lowlands has been divided into four physio-

graphic sections and twenty-eight subsections . The name of the Region is

perhaps somewhat erroneous but perhaps future cartographers can .coin a more

suitable one .

D1 Swan River Lowland

Location

The Swan River Lowland is one of the series of transitional areas

lying between the Great Plains and the Central Lowland, which form broad

valley embayments between upland remnants of the Cretaceous Plateaux marking

the Manitoba Escarpment .

Landform

The Swan River Lowland forms an undulating plain about 70 miles long

and 25 miles wide lying between the Porcupine Hills and Duck Mountain, and

descending from about 1,550 feet elevation at its western junction with the

Assiniboine Plain to 850 feet at Swan Lake in the Manitoba Lowland . This

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broad valley is drained by the Swan, Whitebeech, and Woody Rivers into Swan

Lake and eventually into the Nelson River System . The greater portion of

this plain lies within the Province of Manitoba, the smaller part in

Saskatchewan being referred to as the Upper Swan River Plain, D1 .1 .

Climate

The mean January temperature is between -2 and -40 F, the mean July

between 63 and 640 F, and the mean annual between 33 and 340 F. The growing

season starts between April 25 and 30, and ends between October 6 and 11 .

There are between 1.59 and 169 days in the growing season . The last spring

frost occurs between June 10 and 20 and the first fall frost between August 25

and 30, thus there are between 70 and 80 frost-free days . The annual

precipitation is between 16 and 18 inches of which between 10 and 11 inches

fall between May and September .

D1 .1 Upper Swan River Plain

Location

Most o£ this area is in agricultural settlement, with only a small

portion lying within the southern boundary of the Porcupine Forest Reserve .

These forested areas include portions of Townships 36 and 37, Ranges 30 and

31, west of the first Meridian, and the narrow valley of the Upper Swan River

where it has cut back into the Porcupine Hills Upland in Townships 36 to 40,

Ranges 1 and 2 west of the Second Meridian .

Landforms

The dominant landform comprises a gently undulating to rolling plain.

with elevations between 1,550 and 1,400 feet, developed from a rather complex

pattern of glacial till and outwash, with shallow glacial lacustrine deposits .

These glacial deposits overlay bedrock shales of the Colorado Group, which

contain some calcareous layers which have contributed markedly to the soil

parent material .

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Vegetation

The whole area forms a transition from the Mixed Parkland to the true

Boreal Forest, with extensive tree invasion on natural grassland sites which

have been protected from fires, hk balanced by considerable clearing of

forest cover for agricultural development in the better soil areas .

Soils

The generalized soil zonal separation between the Podzolic soils and

the belt of the mixed Dark Gray Wooded and Chernozemic soils closely follows

the present boundaries of the Porcupine and Duck Mountain Forest Reserves .

Within settlement the soils are variable, mostly mixtures of Dark Gray

Chernozemic and Dark Gray Wooded, Pelly, Etomami, and Kamsack soils, with

Dark Gray and Orthic Gray Wooded, Waitville, and Black, Canora and Whitesand

soils occurring throughout . These soils are described in Soil Survey Report

No . 12. Within the forest reserve, the soils are mostly Gray Wooded types

comparable to the Waitville Association with some admixture of Dark Gray

Wooded Etomami soils . The latter occurring on moderately fine textured

calcareous glacial till, modified by inclusion of Colorado shales and Paleozoic

RXZXKKXKX limestones . The soils in the eroded upper valley of the Swan

River are largely a mixture of Podzolic and weakly developed Regosolic soils,

developed on rough broken lands and steep valley slopes .

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural potential of the soils within settlement ranges

from poor to good . Good progress has been made in developing the better

soils despite the heavy clearing costs . The areas of Gray Wooded Waitville

soils, particularly on the stony and rolling phases, and the mixed Black

and Dark Gray Whitesand and Glenbush soils on coarse textured deposits

may be considered as poor to non-arable types .

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.,

33

The limited areas of the Upper Swan River Plain occurring within

the present forest reserve boundaries may be considered as suitable for

commercial forest production, with a good potential for production of Aspen

and White Spruce .

D2 Carrot River Lowland

Location

The Carrot River Lowlands form an extensive plain in east central

Saskatchewan extending westward from the Manitoba Lowlands to the borders of

the Great Plains regions, at an upper elevation of 1,450 feet to 1,550 feet,

and lying below the Upper Cretaceous Highlands .

Landforms

The landform includes the broad valleys of the Lower Saskatchewan

and Red Deer Rivers and their tributaries . The Lower Saskatchewan Valley

extends eastward from the river flats near Prince Albert on the north branch

and the St . Louis flats on the south branch of the Saskatchewan Rivers and

broadens into a wide alluvial lacustrine plain lying between the Waskesiu

Hills Upland and Wapawekka Uplands to the north and the Porcupine Hills to

the south . The Carrot, White Fox, Torch and Mossy Rivers are main tributaries

of the Saskatchewan draining portions of this plain . The Upper Red Deer

Valley which has been included as part of the same physiographic unit lies

between the Porcupine and Pasquia Uplands and drains eastward into the Nelson

system. It is connected to the Carrot River portion of the plain by a

narrow glacial xpxkiwk"x spillway and a drainage divide between the Crooked

River and the Red Deer Rivers at an approximate elevation of 1,600 feet .

The Pasquia Hills Upland is therefore left as a large but isolated plateau

remnant within the lowland .

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Geology and Soil Parent Materials

In the portions of the Carrot River Lowlands north of the Pasquia and

east of the Wapawekka Uplands, the geological formations underlying the surficial

glacial deposits are mostly sandy beds of the Lower Cretaceous, Swan River

Group . These beds have contributed much to the sandy characteristics of the

soils in these areas .

Further southwestward, in the Melfort Plain and Upper

Red Deer valley, it is probable that some of the Upper Cretaceous clay shales,

particularly those of the Colorado Group may form the immediate bedrock surface .

These preglacial lowlands lying between relatively high uplands were

apparently east avenues for advancing ice movements in glacial times . Glacial

scouring followed by relatively thin glacial deposition is apparent in the

eastern part of the lowland which is underlain by sandy beds, but further west

where the ice advanced across the shaly clays the glacial deposits become

considerably thicker and finer textured .

With the frontal melting and general shrinkage of the ice fields much

of the drainage waters from western Saskatchewan flowed to these lower areas

resulting in the formation of large lake areas within the Carrot River Lowland,

which eventually extended against retreating ice barriers to drain into the

Lake Agassiz basin of the Manitoba Lowlands .

During this period the area was

heavily mantled by variable deposits ; lacustrine silts and clays in deeper

portions and alluvial and sandy delta deposits in the shallow lake margins .

Consequently few areas of morainic till are exposed at the surface . Coarse

outwash deposits and thin glacio-fluvial sands overlying or mixed with lake

modified clays occur, particularly in the northern portions of the area where

the ice front is believed to have formed the northern margin of the lake .

Further east there is a gradual drop in the marginal lake plain through a

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succession of narrow beach ridges and intervening poorly drained flats to

the main concentration of beach ridges marking the Lake Agassiz levels in

the Manitoba Lowland .

A number of the sandy deposits have been modified by

wind action subsequent to drainage of the area .

Climate

The Carrot River Lowlands climatic features are better than either

the Lac La Ronge Lowland or Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland both of which are

sections within the Manitoba-Saskatchewan Lowland Region . The Carrot River

Lowlands have a longer frost-free period and a longer growing season . Its

mean January temperature is between -2 and -4° F, the July mean temperature

is between 64 and 660 F, and the mean annual is 33 to 350 F. The growing

season lasts between 159 and 169 days commencing between April 25 to 30

and ending between October 6 to 11 . The last spring frost is between June 1

and 10 and the first fall frost between August 20 and September 10,

therefore there are between 90 and 100 frost-free days . The annual precipitation

is 15 to 16 inches of which between 10 to 11 inches fall between May and

September .

Soils

Black and Dark Gray Chernozemic, Dark Gray Wooded, and Gray Wooded

soils are found on upland sites, as the area is included in the transition

zones from Parkland to Forest . In poorly drained sites, meadows and thin

peaty soilsoccur, while in most wet areas thick organic peats are found .

Within the forested sections, Orthic Gray Wooded and organic soils are

dominant although a few Dark Gray Wooded types are found on the fringes of

the Reserves, mainly in the Red Earth Plain and Upper Red Deer Plain .

No

substantial areas of Black soils are found within any of the Forest Reserves .

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- 36

Divisions Within the Carrot River Lowlands

Because of the extensive areas of variable and complex deposition,

and the zonal transition from Grassland to Forest soils within this Region it

has been found necessary to subdivide the Carrot River Lowlands into a large

number of subsection mapping units based on differing features of parent

material and soils . Seventeen areas have been separated and the location

of each indicated on the map . Of these, four lie entirely within the provincial

forest, and five solely within the areas of agricultural settlement . The

remaining eight are partly utilized for agriculture and partly lie within

the Forest Reserves . The forest sections are discussed specifically in this

report, but the reader is referred to Saskatchewan Soil Survey Reports No .

12 and 13 for fuller descriptions of the soils within the agricultural areas .

D2 .1 Torch River Plain

Location

This area, lying north of the Smeaton Plain, includes both Forest

Reserve and lands within the bounds o£ agricultural settlement .

Landform and Drainage

The landform consists mainly of an undulating to gently rolling outwash

plain including some deep pitted lakes and long ridges . The trend of the

drainage,including streams and lakes, and that of muskegs and ridges, is

generally from northwest to southeast . The main streams include the Torch,

Gull, White Gull, Falling Horse, and Stewart Creeks which have cut fairly

deeply into the plain .

Soils

The parent materials of the soils are mostly coarse textured sandy

and gravelly deposits with local areas of alluvial sands and some modified

till within the agricultural districts south of the Torch River bend .

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- 3 7 -

In the Forest Reserve the well drained soils are mostly Podzolic Gray

Wooded, and Minimal Podzol sands comparable to those of the Bodmin and Pine

Associations . Shallow to deep peat, mostly sphagnum types are found in the

poorly drained areas, and a number of fairly large muskegs occur. Within the

settled area south of the Torch River, Pine sand, Bodmin sandy loam, Sylvania

fine sandy and very fine sandy loams and small local areas of Garrick and

Kelsey loam occur on well drained sites and shallow peats and peaty meadows

occupy poorly drained positions . The reader is referred to Soil Survey Report

No . 13 for description of these soils .

Resource Evaluation

The soils within the agricultural districts may be classified as fair

to very poor for agriculture . Within the Forest Reserve the area is considered

as very poor to non-arable because of the dominance of coarse sandy and

gravelly Podzolic soils, and the unsuitability of the deep peats for agriculture .

The area supports a fair to good growth of soft woods, mostly Jack

Pine, with Black Spruce in peaty areas . The construction of the Hanson Lake

development road northward from the agricultural settlements near Smeaton has

opened up the area to forestry and recreational development .

D2 .2

Smeaton 'Plain

Location

The Smeaton Plain lies almost entirely within the agricultural area

except for a small area of coarse textured Podzolic soils on outwash deposits

which occurs within the Forest Reserve .

Landform

The area may be considered as part of a gently undulating marginal

lake plain of thin to discontinuous coarse textured fluvial deposits overlying

lake modified clayey till . Local ridges of sand are common .

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Soils

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This Association of landform type and parent material has given rise

to an intricate pattern of micro-topography and variable drainage, which is

reflected in the intimate association of Dark Gray Wooded, Podzolized Gray

Wooded and shallow peats and peaty meadow soils referred to as the Smeaton

complex. Soils characteristic of the Kelsey, Weirdale, Garrick, Bodmin,

Sylvania and Pine Associations as well as mixed organic mineral and organic

soils also occur .

Resource Evaluation

The soils of the Smeaton complex vary widely in agricultural productivity

ranging generally from fair to poor, interspersed with local areas of good

and,non-arable types . The area is considered inferior in productivity to

the White Fox Plain .

Some fair stands of Jack Pine occur on sandy ridges within the

settled area .

The pattern of soils and topography in much of the Smeaton Plain is

favourable as a wildlife habitat .

D2 .3 Grassy Lake Plain

Location

This is a relatively small plain occurring north and east of the

Torch River, and lies partly within the Forest Reserve and partly within

the agricultural area .

Landform and Soils

It forms an undulating to gently rolling marginal lake plain of medium

to medium heavy textured lacustrine clays and clayey till soils . The well

drained soils are mostly Gray Wooded with some Dark Gray Wooded types comparable

to the Garrick and Kelsey Associations . Local areas of thin peaty soils occur

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in poorly drained sites . Stones are not a serious handicap .

Resource Evaluation

The settled portion of the area is classed as good to fair soils,

for crop production, depending on the topography. The area within the reserve

is generally inferior because of the occurrence of rougher rolling topography,

but may be classed as fair to poor. The area is productive for forestry and

supports good mixed-wood stands of Aspen and White Spruce .

D2.4 Garrick Plain

Location

This Plain lies within the agricultural area and is located between

the villages of White Fox and Garrick .

Landform

It forms a local gently to roughly undulating lacustro-till plain

with mixed deposits of undifferentiated medium textured till and moderately

heavy lake modified till .

Soils

The well drained soils are dominantly Gray Wooded with some Dark Gray

Wooded profiles and are mapped in the Waitville, Garrick and Kelsey Associations .

The Waitville soils are dominantly Ra Gray Wooded loams and are fairly stony.

The Garrick soils include Gray Wooded loamsto clay loams with variable degrees

of stoniness . Some Gray Wooded and Dark Gray Wooded Solonetzic profiles are

found in the Garrick and Kelsey soils . Local areas of peaty soils occur.

Resource Evaluation

The soils throughout the area are considered as fair to good types

for agriculture depending mainly on the degree of stoniness and of local rough

topography . The Garrick and Kelsey soil being considered as superior to the

Waitville . Intensive lumbering was practiced in earlier years in the districts

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around the hamlet of Love . There are few merchantable stands of trees left

in the area .

D2 .5 Mossy River Plain

Location

The Mossy River Plain lies entirely within the Provincial Forest and

forms an extensive marginal lake plain sloping gently eastward from the base

of the Wapawekka Upland at about 1,450 feet for 40 to 50 miles, to the series

of beach ridges at approximately 1,000 feet which mark the sharp drop to the

Manitoba Lowlands .

Landform

Mainly a gently sloping plain broken by a succession of intermittent

low and narrow ridges which lie transversely to the general slope . These

sandy and gravelly ridges tend to impede the natural drainage of the area

which is feebly developed through the Missipuskiow and Mossy River.

Soils

Almost the entire area is occupied by poorly drained, thick mossy

pests which liE between the ridges . Gray Wooded and Podzolic sand profiles

are found on the latter under a cover of Jack Pines . The mineral parent

material beneath the deep sphagnum and fibrous peats is believed to be mostly

sandy as the area is underlain by Lower Cretaceous deposits . This has been

partially confirmed by the limited observations made in this area .

Resource Evaluation

The area in its present state must be classed as very poor to non-

arable land because of the extent and depth of the thick moss peats and the

economics of drainage . Black Spruce and Tamarack are the dominant trees on

the bog soils with Jack Pine occurring on the better drained ridges . Most

of the peats are frozen for a considerable portion of the year and the

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trees are small and general vegetative growth limited on this account . The

area has very limited potential, either for lumbering or recreational activity.

D2 .6 Weirdale Plain

Location

This Plain lies entirely within the area of agricultural settlement .

It is located north and east of Prince Albert, extending from the White Star

area on the west to east of Weirdale and lying roughly between the Saskatchewan

River on the south and Highway 55 on the north .

Land fo rm

It forms a gently undulating lacustrine and alluvial plain with local

and minor deposits of glacial till and coarse outwash deposits, the latter

generally flanking stream channels .

Soils

The well drained soils are mainly Orthic Dark Gray, Dark Gray Wooded

and Rego Dark Gray (wooded calcareous) soils with some thick Orthic Black soils

of the Kamsack, Weirdale, Canora and Shellbrook Associations . These soils

range in texture from fine sandy loams to clay loams . Local complexes of

Black, Dark .Gray Chernozem, and Dark Gray Wooded gravelly sandy loam soils

of the Whitesand and Glenbush Associations also occur. Poorly drained meadow

and peaty meadows are fairly common in all associations, but with better

drainage conditions the extent of these soil types is diminishing . The reader

is referred to Soil Report and Map No . 13 for greater detail on these soils .

Resource Evaluation

The area may be regarded as one of the better agricultural areas . Most

of the Weirdale, Kamsack and Canora soils are classed as good agricultural

soils as are their poorly drained peaty members if adequate drainage is

established . The fine sandy Shellbrook soils may be considered as good soils

if erosion is controlled . The local areas of gravelly Whitesand and Glenbush

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42

soils are grouped as fair to very poor soils depending on their comparative

drought resistance and degree of podzolic development . The area is mostly

under cultivation and the trees are confined in the main to shelter belts and

local wood lots .

D2 .7 Petaigan Plain

Location

This agricultural area lies north of the Im town of Carrot River and

east of Nipawin .

Landform

Mainly a local plain of relatively poorly drained lacustrine clay

soils . The topography is flat to gently undulating .

Soils

The moderately well drained soils are mainly Dark Gray solonetzic

or Gray Wooded solonetzic clays . The poorly drained soils are generally

shallow peaty phases with heavy solonetz-like clayey subsoils . Thick peat

soils are found in local areas . These soils have been mapped in the Tisdale

and Arborfield Associations as described in Soils Report No . 13 .

Resource Evaluation

The soils may be classed as good to fair soils depending on the

degree of improvement in drainage, and on the degree of solonetzic or other

poor structural development in the subsoil horizons .

Resource Evaluation

A portion of the Petaigan Plain is now flooded by the reservoir formed

by the Squaw Rapids Dam and Power Project, and lost to agricultural settlement .

As compensation, the recreational potential of the area will increase with

the creation of a lake approximately 40 miles in length, and the possibility

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43

of extensive well wooded sandy shore lines suitable for residential and

recreational development, within reasonable distance of the main population

centres .

D2 .8 Red Earth Plain

Location

The Red Earth Plain extends from the agricultural settlements near

the village of Arborfield northeastward into the Pasquia Forest Reserve to

Township 53, Range 3, West of the 2nd Meridian, east of the Shoal Lake Indian

Reserve .

Landform

The area forms a narrow marginal lake plain which slopes gently

northward from the Agassiz beaches at the base of the Pasquia Hills Escarpment

to the Carrot River which forms the boundary between it~and the alluvial flood

plain of the Saskatchewan delta . The surface deposits are mostly shallow

lacustrine clays and lake-modified glacial till with local beach ridges of

stony till and gravelly outwash lying at right angles to the slope. These

ridges have been cut by many creeks flowing from the slopes of the Pasquia

Hills, and which during periods of excessive spring run-off or heavy rains

frequently overflow causing local flooding and water erosion . Among these

mention can be made of the Jordan River, Connell, Papikwan, Cracking and Red

Earth Creeks .

Soils

Within the settlement areas the soils are mainly Dark Gray Chernozemic

and Dark Gray Wooded with some Orthic Gray Wooded and Solonetzic soils with

associated poorly drained phases on lacustrine clay deposits . These have

been mapped in the Tisdale and Arborfield Associations . They are interspersed

with local areas of Podzolic soils on outwash deposits mapped as Bodmin .

Within the forest area the soils are dominantly Dark Gray Wooded and

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Dark Gray Solonetz soils similar to Tisdale types and Gray Wooded solodized

solonetz comparable to Arborfield soils . Sedge peats and sphagnum bogs are

frequently found on the upper slope side of the many coarse textured and

stony ridges .

Resource Evaluation

The Tisdale soils are considered as good and the Arborfield as fair

agricultural soils, with the latter considered as inferior to the Tisdale,

both in fertility and structure . Both soils are limited to some degree by

heavy textures, the occurrence of poor structured solonetzic B horizons and

a fair amount of poor drainage . The latter feature is usually overcome after

settlement but does become a problem in wet seasons . Heavy clearing costs

have also been a limiting factor, particularly with the Arborfield soil .

Although these soils have been extensively developed in the settled

area they are also productive forest types . The Red Earth Plain has been

one of the better areas in the province for the production of commercial White

Spruce, and has been extensively lumbered in the past . Today, where adequate

fire protection is being maintained, a vigorous new forest is now maturing .

There has bffx been from time to time requests for the further expansion of

agricultural settlement into this area . However, while there is the possibility

of potential agxifffE:kx agricultural development of a much larger area in the

alluvial plains of the Saskatchewan delta, the maintenance of the forest

vegetation in the Red Earth Plain must be considered desirable from the

standpoint of maintaining flood protection to the Delta region, and an adequate

and sustained flow in the Carrot River, as well as for a future source of

forest products .

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D2 .9 Melfort Plain

Location

This well known area lying to the south of the Forest Region is an

agricultural area supporting a prosperous farming economy between the towns

of Melfort and Tisdale . The soils and area are described in Soils Report

No . 12 but are discussed briefly in this report because it forms the major

subsection of the . Carrot River Lowland .

Landform

Mainly a gently undulating and sloping lacustrine plain of clay

deposition with an elevation ranging between 1,600 and 1,500 feet elevation .

This plain was apparently formed by a series of glacial lakes by which the

drainage waters of the Saskatchewan Rivers in post glacial time eventually

flowed to Lake Agassiz in the Manitoba Lowlands .

The present drainage is

effected by a series of local creeks with picturesque names such as the

Sweetwater, Melfort, Thatch, Goosehunting, Leather, Dog Hide, Hanging Hide,

and Presbyterian which flow into the Carrot River.

Soils

The soils are mainly Black and Dark Gray chernozemic with associated

meadow soils and are mostly considered as very good agricultural soils .

Excepting for local wood lots, forest production plays no part in the present

economy of the area .

D2.10 White Fox Plain

Location

The White Fox Plain is an area of alluvial, lacustrine and lake modified

till deposits lying north of the Saskatchewan River . Most of the area centred

on the town of White Fox lies within agricultural settlement, but a small

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area lies within the boundary of the Fort a La Corne Reserve, and a larger

portion extends beyond settlement in a northeasterly direction between the

Saskatchewan and Torch Rivers to the vicinity of Squaw Rapids .

Soils of the Settled Area

Within settlement, the soils have been described in Soils Report No .

13 . They are mainly Dark Gray Chernozemic, Dark Gray Wooded and Podzolized

Gray Wooded with associated Peaty soils developed on silty and sandy alluvial

lacustrine deposits, although some lake modified till soils also occur . These

alluvial lacustrine soils have been mapped in the Kamsack, Weirdale, Tisdale,

Nipawin, Shellbrook, Carrot River, White Fox and La Corne Associations . The

lake modified till soils are represented by the Kelsey and Garrick soils .

Most of these soils are rated from fair to good for agricultural development

depending on the textures and degree of podzolic development . An area of

Gray Wooded, Podzolic and Regosolic on sandy alluvial deposits, and associated

meadow soils, some of which are reworked by wind extend into the Fort a La

Come Reserve . These soils are likely similar to the lighter textured La Come

sandy loams and would be rated as poor agricultural soils .

Soils of the . Forested Area

Between the Saskatchewan and Torch Rivers the soils in the forested

areas are mostly Gray Wooded, Podzolic Gray Wooded, and Regosolic on sandy

alluvial and aeolian sand deposits, comparable to the La Corne, Sylvania and

Pine Associations . Some peaty meadow soils comparable to light sandy Carrot

River types also occur . Most of these soils must be considered, at present,

as poor to non-arable for agricultural production, and their forestry potential

is limited . A few local areas of somewhat heavier textured Gray Podzolic or

peaty soils may rate better. The development of the Squaw Rapids hydro plant,

and formation of a large lake in the Saskatchewan Valley add a recreational

potential to this area .

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D2 .11 La Corne Plain

Location, Landform and Drainage

This area which lies almost entirely within the Fort a La Come

Reserve north of the Saskatchewan River comprises a very gently undulating to

rolling sand plain of alluvial deposition, portions of which have been modified

by past aeolian activity to form extensive dunes . The northern portion of the

area is drained to the White Fox River, the southern portion by a series of

creeks flowing to the Saskatchewan .

Soils

The well drained soils are Podzolic and Regosolic sands and sandy

loams developed on aeolian and alluvial deposits, which support a dominant

vegetation of Jack Pine with local areas of hardwood stands of Aspen and

Black Poplar. Somewhat heavier textured Gray Wooded fine and very fine sandy

loams comparable to those of the La Corne Association also occur . There is a

significant occurrence of poorly drained meadow and peaty meadow soils in the

northwest portion of the Reserve which supports mainly sedge grasses and

willows, some Tamarack and Black Spruce also occur .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered unsuitable for agricultural development because

of the presence of very sandy Podzolic soils . With regard to forestry,

silviculture studies have been carried on in the Reserve, and the area is

considered to have a fair to good potential for Jack Pine pulpwood production,

particularly because of its accessibility to transportation and power.

The habitat is favourable for wildlife and is inhabited by moose,

deer and elk .

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D2 .12 Nipawin Plain

Location, Extent and Drainage

The Nipawin Plain forms an area of mixed medium to coarse textured

sandy alluvial and lacustrine deposits lying south of the Saskatchewan River

Valley and occurring between it and the heavier lacustrine clays of the

Melfort Plain . It extends eastward for over 70 miles from Range 24, north

of Brancepeth to Range 13, west of the Second Meridian beyond the town of

Nipawin . The area lies mainly within the agricultural settlement, but includes

those portions of the Fort a La Corne Forest Reserve and a number of Indian

Reserves which lie south of the Saskatchewan River. The major drainage is

through the Saskatchewan and Carrot Rivers .

Soils

The soils are quite varied, but are mainly Podzolic Dark Gray and

Gray Wooded with associated meadow and peaty meadow soils, including members

of the Nipawin, Shellbrook, La Corne, Sylvania and Pine Associations . Smaller

areas of Black and Dark Gray Chernozemic soils of the Melfort, Tisdale and

Weirdale Associations also occur.

Resource Evaluation

Most of these soils are considered fair to good for agricultural

production with the exceptions of the Sylvania sandy loams which are poor

and the Pine sands which are considered as non-arable .

Within the La Corne Reserve, the soils are mostly Podzolic sands

with associated peaty meadows and are considered non-arable for agriculture

and have a limited potential for commercial forest production .

D2 .13 Carrot River Plain

Location

This area lying entirely within the agricultural settlement forms a

very gently undulating plain of sandy alluvial materials deposited between

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the Saskatchewan and Carrot Rivers, east of the Melfort Lake Plain .

Soils

The soils are mainly peaty meadows and imperfectly drained Calcareous

Dark Gray Chernozemic soils developed on fine sandy to very fine sandy loam

deposits which have been mapped and described in No . 13 as the Carrot River

Assocation . Other soils occurring to a limited extent include the Sylvania,

White Fox and Weirdale Associations . Many of the soils now considered as

peaty meadows were - originally organic soils with over three feet of sedge and

woody peat deposits, but much of which was dmxrxotvx destroyed by fire or

partly worked into the mineral horizons while the land was brought under

of the original peaty cover remains . The

horizon of loosely mixed peat and

poorly drained sandy subsoil which

depth and color characteristics of

the amount of original peat incorporated .

inches and over, gray to brown in

in local areas where the peat ha$

been severely burnt little organic matter remains and the surface soils are

shallow, low in organic matter and generally very susceptible to wind erosion .

Resource Evaluation

Most of the Carrot River Plain was originally poorly drained and

extensive ditching and surface drainage were required to successfully develop

the area . Even today, wet seasons and local flooding can periodically hinder

successful agriculture . By and large, however, much progress has been made

in developing the Carrot River soils for agriculture and they are considered

as fair for cereals and fair to good for forage crop production . The

prevention of wind erosion, and maintenance of organic matter and fertility

levels are very necessary for sustained production on these soils .

cultivation, and today very little

cultivated soils consist of a dark

humus-mineral material overlying a

is usually but not always calcareous .

the surface soil depends on

Generally it is of.fairly good depth, 8

colour, and high in organic matter, but

surface

mottled

The

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D2 .14 Saskatchewan Valley

Location and Extent

This area includes the rough broken slopes, and the alluvial terraces

and river bottom lands of the Saskatchewan River Valley extending from west

of Prince Albert and St . Louis on the north and south branches of the River

to the Forks, where the rivers join and from there eastward on the main stream

to Nipawin . A portion of the valley is now submerged in the newly created

reservoir of the Squaw Rapid Hydro Dam Project.

Soils

Regosolic and weakly developed Podzolic soils are dominant on the

variable unconsolidated eroded and ax colluvial hillwash deposits of the steep

slopes along the entire valley. The slopes are mainly well wooded except for

a few steep slopes with southern exposures .

Significant areas of alluvial terrace and flood plain soils occur,

particularly along the north and south branches above the junction of the

rivers . Most of these soils are calcareous mull regosols of mixed and variable

textures with associated poorly drained meadow and peaty meadows . Where these

alluvial soils have become well wooded, some calcareous Dark Gray and weakly

Podzolic soils have developed .

Resource Evaluation

Moderately successful agricultural development has taken place on

these soils, particularly adjacent to Prince Albert and St . Louis where fairly

extensive areas are under cultivation . Other local alluvial flats and some

higher terraces have been developed further down stream bub these are limited

in extent.

The advent of developing hydro power by utilization of the drop in

elevations of the rivers descending from the Great Plains to the Manitoba

Lowland has been partially realized with the construction of the South

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Saskatchewan and Squaw Rapids Hydro Dams . The possibilities of furth ,r develop-

ment, particularly between the Forks of the Rivers and Nipawin is also under

The construction and development of these projects will notconsideration .

only create

of the rivers and will create reservoir lakes with considerable potential for

recreational development . The steep valley slopes have a potential for winter

recreation, but generally should be kept wooded as "protection forests" of no

commercial value .

D2 .15 Upper Red Deer Plain

Location and Extent

The Upper Red Deer Plain forms an isolated physiographic unit joined

to the remainder of the Carrot River Lowland by a relatively narrow drainage

divide which cuts between the Pasquia Uplands and the Greenwater Hills in

the vicinity of the settlements of Crooked River and Bjorkdale . The plain

is about 30 miles wide and extends eastward from the upper reaches of the

river for a distance of approximately 70 miles to where the Red Deer and

Etomami Rivers join before cutting through the Agassiz beaches near the town

of Hudson Bay .

Much of the area lies within agricultural settlement, but fairly

extensive portions of the plain adjacent to the Uplands remain within the

Porcupine and Pasquia Provincial Forest Reserves .

Landform

Basically it forms a low lying, very gently undulating plain of alluvial,

lacustrine and lake modified till deposits lying between the thinly gla.ciated

Cretaceous Uplands of the Pasquia and Porcupine Hills to the north and south

respectively . The area receives considerable excess drainage from these Uplands

and is rather imperfectly drained by the Red Deer River system .

additional supplies of power, but will assist in the flood control

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Soils

- 5 2 -

The Red Deer Plain lies within the Transition Gray-Black Soil Zone,

and the soils have been described in Survey Report No . 12. They include Dark

Gray Chernozemic and Dark Gray and Gray Wooded Podzolic soils with associated

peaty meadows and organic (muskeg) soils . Local areas of Solonetzic soils

also occur . In the western portion of the plain, which is somewhat better

drained, the soils are mostly Podzolic and Dark Gray Chernozemic types developed

on sandy alluvial materials of the Sylvania and Shellbrook Associations . In

the central and eastern sections, Dark Gray Chernozemic and Gray Wooded with

associated peaty meadows and bog soils occur developed on lacustrine clays and

highly calcareous glacial tills . These soils are mostly mapped as the Tisdale,

Arborfield, Etomami, Kakwa and Waitville Associations . The glacial till soils,

Etomami and Kakwa, are highly calcareous and are characterized by the occurrence

of significant amounts of pinkish light coloured limestones in various stages

of disintegration . The Kakwa soils are more stony than the Etomami soils .

Resource Evaluation

With the exception of the Kakwa and Sylvania soils which are considered

as poor to non-arable, most of the soils are considered as moderately good

for cultivation, although the necessity of extensive drainage in the area

has been a handicap to their rapid development .

Within the areas remaining in forest reserve the soils are mostly

mixed Dark Gray and Gray Wooded soils on glacial till and lacustrine deposits .

Local areas of peaty meadow and organic (muskeg) soils also occur . While the

ultimate disposition of some of the forested lands, particularly areas ofDark Gray Wooded soils may be questioned, they are productive forest sites

and are at present in well managed and protected forest units .

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The Agassiz Beaches

A series of roughly parallel, coarse textured or stony beach ridges

with intervening lagoon areas of swamp and muskeg mark the western shore line

deposits of Glacial Lake Agassiz in northwestern Manitoba and northeastern

Saskatchewan . They form part of an almost continuous belt of beach deposits

extending northward from south of the United States-Canadian border, until

they disappear in the rocky terrain of the Canadian Shield . The descent of

between 100 and 200 feet elevation in a few miles through these series of

beach deposit marks the major physiographic break to the Manitoba Lowlands .

It

is convenient to recognize two major subdivisions of these Agassiz beaches in

Saskatchewan, the Pasquia beaches which flank the Cretaceous Escarpment of the

Pasquia Hills and the Delta beaches which mark the more gradual descent from

The Carrot River Lowland to Saskatchewan Delta and Suggi Lake Lowland . Other

similar, but less extensive, areas of beach deposits flank the Porcupine

and Wapawekka Hills .t

The Agassiz Beaches included in X" report are referred to as Pasquia

Beaches and the Delta Beaches .

D2 .16 Pasquia Beaches

Location and Extent

These shore line deposits form a narrow belt between two and six

miles in width, flanking and marking the initial rise from the lowlands to

the escarpment slopes of the Pasquia Uplands . They extend northeastward from

the town of Hudson Bay, which is located on one of the main Agassiz beaches,

to the Carrot River on the border of the Saskatchewan Delta, from where they

abruptly change direction to the southwest and flank the northern edge of

the Pasquia Escarpment back into the agricultural settlements of the Red Earth

Plain east of Arborfield . The beaches are not continuous, but are broken by

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a series of gaps cut by streams and rivers descending from the Pasquia Hills .

The Red Deer River has cut a major gap through the main beaches south of

Hudson Bay .

Soils

The soils on these successions of low ridges are mainly Podzolic,

on the coarse textured sands and gravels with heavier textured Orthic Gray

Wooded soils on stony till or other deposits . Jack Pine is the dominant

species on the sands and gravels, with Aspen, White and Black Spruce

occurring in the presence of heavier textured subsoils .

Within the intervening muskeg and swamp areas the soils are mostly

deep organic sphagnum or mixed-wood peats which are often frozen at shallow

depths for a large portion of the year, often as late as July or early

August . The vegetation in these areas is mostly stunted Black Spruce and

Tamarack with an understory of Labrador Tea and Sphagnum Moss .

Areas of

open sedge or aquatic marsh vegetation are often found in the wetter portions

of the lagoons, which are usually adjacent to the upper side of the beaches

which act as dams .

Resource Evaluation

The coarse textured podzolic soils on the ridges and the general

impracticability of draining the intervening areas makes the soils in most

of the area unsuitable for development . Some beach ridges have been used as

road or rail grades, and serve as a source of construction material through

otherwise practically impassable terrain . Full advantage of such physiographic

features have been used in the construction of the railway from Hudson Bay

to The Pas and in the location of new development roads in the area .

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D2 .17 Delta Beaches

Location and Extent

The Delta Beaches form a broad gently sloping belt of beach ridges,

marginal moraines, and swamp deposits marking the fairly gradual descent of

about 100 feet from the Carrot River Plains to the Manitoba Lowlands .

They

extend from the outskirts of the -Cpitil of Carrot River northward, across the

Saskatchewan River in the vicinity of Tobin and Squaw Rapids to the vicinity

of the Mossy River and the Suggi Lake Plain xx north of the 16th base line .

From there the beach deposits become less distinct as they extend into the

limestone bedrock plain to the north . The area differs markedly from the

Pasquia Beach area in that it is much wider and the percentage of muskeg and

swam' to beach areas is much greater.

The southern portion extending to the Saskatchewan River has been

described in a Soil Survey Report of the Ravendale-Kennedy Creek Plain

published in 1957 . In the Ravendale portion of the area many of the ridges

are composed of stony glacial till with surface gravelly deposits . These are

apparently of morainic origin, probably recessional moraines . Two of these

were apparently cut through by the Saskatchewan River to form the Tobin and

Squaw Rapids and were utilized in the development of the Squaw Rapids Dam

and NXX Hydro site .

Soils and Utilization

The soils on the ridges and moraines are mainly Podzolic Orthic Gray

Wooded with some Dark Gray Wooded and Podzolized sands . The intervening areas

are mostly wooded muskegs with thick woody peats overlying variable stony

boulder till and lacustrine clay deposits . The area is not considered suitable

for extensive agricultural developments . A fairly small area adjacent to

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.,

56

-

Carrot River has been incorporated as the Carrot River Forest Reserve, the

remainder of the area south of the Saskatchewan and extending to Kennedy

Crrek is at present under crown control . The eventual disposition of this

area will likely be governed by future developments relative to the Hydro

Development and drainage and reclamation of the Saskatchewan Delta area .

Similar conditions of soil and drainage are considered to occur in

many of the areas north of the Saskatchewan, all'of which is at present in

Forest Reserve . A fairly extensive area of upland Gray Wooded and Podzol soils

on alluvial sandy deposits is believed to occur adjacent to the Torch River

similar to that described for the White Fox Plain, but the remainder of the

area is mostly sandy beach and swamp deposits . Much of this is therefore to

be considered as non-arable. The forestry potential is fair to good on kx

some of the Gray Wooded and Podzol soils, but poor in the muskeg areas .

D3 Lac La Ronge Lowland

The Lac La Ronge and Lac Ile-a'la-Crosse Lowlands which together

make up the Upper Churchill Lowlands, are similar in that they lie between

the northern escarpments of the Great Plains and the Canadian Shield . They

have a range in elevation between 1,500 feet and 1,200 feet and are underlain

in the main by sandy beds of Lower Cretaceous origin . They are narrowly

separated from the main body of the Interior Plains by the Wapawekka Upland,

and from each other by a low extension of the Great Plains northward from

Lac La Plonge and Alstead Lake to the Shield near D4pper Lake on the Churchill

River .

Location

The Lac La Ronge Lowland extends northward from Montreal Lake to

Lac La Ronge and lies between the Wapawekka Upland to the east and the

Thunder Hills to the west .

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Landforms

The area may be considered as an ice-scoured glacio-fluvial plain

developed from glacially modified lower cretaceous sands with the addition of

Pre-Cambrian erratics . A number of gravelly and sandy ridges of fluvial or

morainic origin occur particularly in the western portion of the area, while

in the centre and eastern sections extensive undulating to rolling sand

plains of alluvial and aeolian origin occur . Limited local alluvial lacustrine

clay and other lake modified deposits of low relief and poor drainage occur

adjacent to the soz:kx southwest shoreof Lac La Ronge, Extensive areas of poorly

drained bogs are found throughout the area and much of the relatively well

drained sand plains are also interspersed with low poorly drained swamps .

Drainage

The western portion is drained by the Tippo and Smoothstone Rivers

which rise in the western Upland and flow into Pinehouse (Snake) Lake . The

centre portion is drained by the Montreal River which flows from Montreal

Lake to Lac La Ronge . The eastern part of the area is drained by the Bow,

Meeyomoot and Nipekamew Rivers as well as other streams flowing north from

the Wapawekka Escarpment .

Climate

The mean January temperature is between -6 and -loo F, the mean July

between 62 and 630 F, and the mean annual between 30 and 310 F . The growing

season lasts between 148 and 160 days commencing between April 30 and May 5

and ending between October :k$ 1 and 6. The frost-free period is between 80

and 90 days . The annual precipitation is between 16 and 18 inches with about

11 inches falling between May and September .

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Geology and Soil Parent Material

The surficial deposits are believed to be underlain by Lower Cretaceous

sands extending northward to the shield, and the general coarse sandy textures

of the soils with the absence of calcareous clays and limestones tend to

support this view . However, the occurrence of a number of smooth sided lakes,

and reports of occasional limestone erratics or outcrops near the south side

of Lac La Ronge indicate that the possibility of Devonian beds occurring near

the surface .

Soils

The Upland soils are mostly Podzolic sandy types ranging in profile

development from Gray Wooded soils with slight textural B horizons to Gray

Wooded Podzol intergrades and Podzol profiles, the latter with intensely

bleached Ae horizons and Podzolized B horizons.

Podzolic Gray Wooded profiles of poor physical structure occur on the

moderately to impx imperfectly drained clay areas .

The bog soils are mostly deep sphagnum peat types overlying variable

sandy to clay deposits and are maihly saturated to the surface .

The Lac La Ronge Lowland has been subdivided into five physiographic

mapping units based on differing features of relief and soils .

Vegetation

Extensive sands of Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) occupy the sand plains

and low ridges, while intervening poorly drained areas are forested with

Black Spruce (Picea mariana) and Tamarack (Larix laricina) . White Spruce

%X (Picea glauca) and Aspen (Populus tremuloides) are of less importance

here than on the upland tills of the Mixed Wood Section to the south, through

both species, and also Balsam Poplar (Populus balsamifera), are well represented

where drainage conditions are favourable . Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) and

White Birch (Betula papyrifera) xxx are present but not abundant . Large

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areas of swamp, bog and muskeg are common .

D3.1 Smoothstone River Plain

Location and Drainage

This area includes most of the western section of the Lac La Ronge

Lowland . It is drained by way of the Smoothstone River which flows from

Smoothstone Lake in the Waskesiu Hills Upland at 1,572 feet into the lowlands

at Emmeline Lake, elevation 1,395 feet, and from there into the Churchill

River System at Pinehouse (Snake) Lake at an elevation of 1,260 feet .

Landform

A roughly undulating to rolling plain of mixed medium and coarse

textured glacial and coarse textured glacio-fluvial deposits of sandy Lower

Cretaceous origin . Bedrock putcrops, occur in areas adjacent to the border

of the Canadian Shield, and in the numerous rapids occurring in the Smoothstone

River .

Soils

The upland soils are mainly Orthic Gray Wooded, Bisequa Gray Wooded

and Podzol on medium and coarse textured deposits with local areas of very

shallow Podzolic and stony Regosols on bedrock . Deep organic peat soils occur

in the large areas of wooded muskeg, and many local areas of bog soils are

also found within the better drained areas . The upland Podzolic soils are

acidic, deficient in lime and o£ low fertility . The percentage of organic

peat xak soils is large and the economics of drainage high .

Resource Evaluation

The soils are considered to be mostly very poor to non-arable types .

The forest cover is dominantly softwoods, Jack Pine and Black Spruce with

some mixed wood cover including Aspen and Birch .

The potentiality of the area

for commercial forestry is poor, largely due to slow growth rates and the

high percentage of wooded swamp . It is also limited by general lack of

accessibility .

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D3 .2 Montreal River Plain

Location and Drainage

This area includes the central portion of the Lac La Ronge Lowland

which is drained by way of the Montreal River flowing from Montreal Lake at

an elevation of 1,608 feet into Egg Lake and Lac La Ronge at 1,290 and 1,198

feet elevation respectively .

Landform

The area is a gently sloping to undulating fluvio-glacial and alluvial

sand plain, underlain by bedrock of sandy Lower Cretaceous origin . A number of

gravelly and sandy ridges occur in the area .

Soils

The upland soils are mainly coarse textured Podzolics, including sandy

Gray Wooded, Bisequa Gray Wooded and Podzol types . The greater portion of the

area .i s imperfectly to poorly drained with sphagnum and woody peat soils

underlain by coarse textured deposits similar to those found on the uplands .

Resource Evaluation

Because of the extensive muskegs and the associated coarse textured

Podzolic soils, the area must be considered as unsuitable for agricultural

development .

The dominant tree species are softwoods, mainly Jack Pine on the

upland and Black Spruce and Tamarack in the muskeg areas . The potential

productivity of the area for forestry Is limited .

D3 .3 Bow River Plain

Landform and Drainage

The Bow River Plain is a rolling to hilly drift plain of glacially

modified Lower Cretaceous sands with the addition of Pre-Cambrian stony

materials . The sandy drift material has undergone some wind and water

modification as evidenced by local alluvial and aeolian deposits with occasional

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areas of sand dunes . The area is dissected by the Bow River which drains

into Lac La Ronge .

Soils

The soils vary from podzolized (Gray Wooded) sands to Bisequa Gray

Wooded and Podzols, nearly all of which are developed on coarse sands to loamy

sands . Some indications of buried soil profiles have been observed in exposures

along the highway which bisects the area . Only minor areas of Organic soils

are found, mostly in local depressions or adjacent to creek channels .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered as unsuitable for agricultural development,

but it supports a dominant Jack Pine vegetation, which has a commercial

potential . Local mixed-wood areas supporting good stands of Aspen also occur.

D3 .4 Wapawekka Plain

Location and Drainage

This area occupies the eastern portion of the Lac La Ronge Lowland

lying north of the Wapawekka Hills Upland . The westerly portion of the plain

is drained by the Meeyomoot and Nipekamen Rivers into Lac La Ronge at an

elevation of 1,198 feet and thus by the Churchill drainage system. The

eastern portion of the plain is drained by a series of creeks and rivers into

Wapawekka Lake at 1,290 feet, and thus becomes part of the Nelson watershed .

A fairly low drainage divide separates the two drainage systems .

Land fo rm

The area forms a gently sloping to undulating, thinly glaciated sand

plain overlying sandy bedrock deposits of Lower Cretaceous origin .

The round

shape of local. lakes suggest the occurrence of limestone beds at shallow depth .

Soils

The soils are mainly mixtures of Organic and Podzolic types developed

on glacio-fluvial and sandy alluvial deposits . Towards the eastern portion

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of the area relatively well drained sand plains slope upward to the Wapawekka

Hills, but to the west the area becomes progressively wetter and extensive

bogs occur, particularly in the southwestern portion of the plain .

Resource Evaluation

- 62 -

The soils in the area are considered as very poor to non-arable on

the basis of the extensive areas of muskeg and the occurrence of coarse

textured Podzolic sands .

Much of. the area supports a relatively young growth of softwoods,

mostly Jack Pine and Black Spruce . There is the potential within the area

for commercial forestry and recreational pursuits .

D3 .5 Egg Lake Plain

Location

The Egg Lake Plain includes the lower northeastern portions of the

Lac La Ronge Lowland including the areas surrounding Morin, Egg, Bigstone and

Potatoe Lakes and those adjacent to the southwestern shore of Lac La Ronge .

Landform

The area forms a roughly undulating ice-scoured plain with a thin

mantle of mixed Pre-Cambrian glacial drift, gravelly outwash, and local areas

of thin alluvial lacustrine silts and clays, all overlying bedrock of Lower

Cretaceous sands .

The occurrence of Devonian limestone bedrock near the surface is

suspected . A few limestone erratics have been noted within the area and

limestone shingle occurs on some islands and shore deposits in the south

bay of Lac La Ronge .

Soils

The major portion of the area is poorly drained and the soils are

mostly organic, sphagnum and woody mixed peats interspersed with imperfectly

drained Gray Wooded and locally better drained Podzolic sandy soils . A few

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local soils with thin dark humus mineral surface horizons occur on alluvial

and lake shore deposits near the mouth of the Potatoe River and between

Bigstone and Lac La Ronge .

Resource Evaluation

- 63 -

The area is considered as very poor to non-arable, because of the

extensive occurrence of stony gravelly Podzolic soils and of thick peats .

Some limited agriculture development has taken place on the small areas of

gleyed Podzolic and alluvial soils adjacent to the settlement at La Ronge,

and in the Indian settlement at Potatoe River. The gleyed Gray Wooded soils

on silt and clay deposits are low in organic matter content and of poor

physical structure .

The potentiality of the area for commercial forest production is

limited . The main recreational activity of the area is mainly centred around

the settlement of La Ronge, and on the south shore of Lac La Ronge on

Meeyomoot Bay .

D4 Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland

Historical Notes

The Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland has a record of development and

settlement extending back for nearly two hundred years . This is largely due

to the strategic importance of the lakes and rivers of this area in furnishing

transportation routes for the original native mp population, and later for

early explorers and traders in their attempts to penetrate the northwestern

areas and dominate the fur trade . In 1791, Thomas Frobisher built a fort at

Ile-a-la-Crosse and this became the second oldest settlement in Saskatchewan .

The fort was strategically situated to take HX advantage of the northwestern.

water routes to the Mackenzie River by way of Methy Portage ; and to the

southern Saskatchewan Prairies by way of the Beaver River, and finally by

the Churchill River route to Hudson Bay . Many other settlements were developed,

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among them those of Beauval, Buffalo Narrows, Dillon and La Loche, and most

of these have continued to serve as centres for the Indian and Metis population .

The traffic by waterway has diminished in importance and the area is

now serviced by air and road transportation . The construction of a development

highway from Green Lake through Beauval to Buffalo Narrows and La Loche on

Methy Lake links the area to the Saskatchewan Highway grid .

Location and Drainage

The Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland includes the areas of low relief lying

between the Mostoos Upland to the west and the Dore Lake and La Plonge Plains

to the east .

It extends from the Lower Beaver River Valley below Grand Rapids

on the south to the higher Methy Portage Plains north of Peter Pond Lake and

the Canadian Shield at the northern edge of Churchill and Ile-a-la-Crosse Lake .

The overall relief is very slight, ranging from between 1,450 feet and 1,500

feet at the base of the Uplands to a low elevation of 1,380 feet where the

waters from Ile-a-la-Crosse Lake flow into the main Churchill River . The area

is drained by the Beaver, Canoe, McCusker, Dillon and Methy Rivers into the

lakes of the Churchill system .

Geology and Soil Parent Materials

The surface glacial deposits are believed to be underlain by Lower

Cretaceous beds belonging to the Blairmore-Manville Group . These include the

light yellow sandstones of the McMurrary formation, which have contributed sand,

some clay and coal fragments to the surface deposits . The landforms and

topography of the area indicate intense glacial and post glacial activity .

The low relief of the area and the occurrence of large elongated lakes and

poorly drained areas with a marked northwest to southeast trend suggest glacial

scouring by ice moving from the northwest . There is a relatively thin deposition

of glacial materials containing bituminous tar sands, occasional Devonian

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dolomite erratics, and sands derived from the Athabascan deposits, whose.

source materials are in the northwest. These materials incorporated with the

local cretaceous sands and shales has given rise to glacial parent materials

high in sand and generally low in carbonates and limestone rock .

Landform

The activities of Pleistocene times have resulted in the development

of a glacial fluvial plain of low relief and composed largely of areas of thin

sandy and gravelly overwash deposited on a water modified sandy to sandy clay,

very slightly calcareous, glacial till . Minor areas of glacial till without

a sandy overburden occur, as well as very local alluvial and lacustrine deposits .

The latter are particularly evident in the Lower Beaver Valley, and the Canoe

Lake area . The low relief of the country with very little stream gradient

has resulted in extensive areas of poorly drained bog and swamps between the

better drained sandy ridges and uplands .

Drainage

The occurrence of considerable areas of sandy and gravelly fluvial

deposits on terrace levels which are considerably higher than the present

stream channels, suggest a period of drainage at the time when a large body

of water occupied the lowland area . This drainage flowed southeastward through

the present Beaver Valley, Green Lake, Cowan River and Delaronde Lake spillways

to the Saskatchewan Lowlands . Subsequent retreat of the ice to the north opened

present lower drainage to the Churchill system . This former high level water

body was designated as glacial lake Hyper Churchill by Tyrrel, one of the

first geologists to study the area.

Climate

This Region has a mean January temperature between -6 and -loo F, a

mean July temperature of between 62 and 630 F and a mean annual temperature

between 29 and 300 F . The growing season starts between April 30 and May 5,

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lasts about 148 to 160 days, and ends between October 1 and 6 . The frost-free

period is between 70 to 80 days . The annual precipitation is 16 to 18 inches

of which the majority occurs between May and September .

Soils

Mixed sandy and medium textured Podzoli-c soils are found on the well

drained sites . These soils range from Gray Wooded to Podzol Gray Wooded

intergrades and Podzols . The former soils occur most frequently on the finer

textured parent materials ; the more intensely developed Podzol soils occurring

on sands . Most of these soils are moderately to strongly acidic in the

surface horizons with lime carbonate, if present, occurring at lower depths .

The soils developed in the poorly drained bog areas are mostly sphagnum peat

types with acidic to very slightly calcareous mineral sub-horizons . Soils

developed on the alluvial deposits of the Beaver Valley are mixed thin peaty

meadow and sedge peats on variable textured, calcareous and sometimes saline

deposits .

Agriculture

A limited agricultural development has taken place adjacent to most

of these settlements, but is mostly confined to vegetable gardening and

limited livestock production for local consumption . The most intensive

development of this nature has taken place adjacent to the settlements of

Beauval in the Beaver Valley .

Divisions

The lowland has been divided into five subsection units for

descriptive purposes .

D4.1 Methy River Plain

The Methy River Plain forms the northwestern portion of the Lac

Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland, north of Peter Pond Lake . It lies generally below

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1,500 foot elevation, and includes the relatively gently sloping lowlands

surrounding Methy Lake and the Methy River. Methy Lake is shallow and lies

at an elevation of 1,460 feet, and is drained by Methy River, a sluggish stream

which flows approximately 20 miles to the southeast through reedy swamp land

to Peter Pond Lake at 1,382 feet .

Geology xx and Soil Parent Material

The surface deposits are mainly mixed medium and coarse textured stony

glacial till and coarse sandy gravelly outwash deposits, the outwash often

occurring as shallow deposits over glacial till . Local areas of heavier textured

lake modified stony till and alluvial sandy deposits are found adjacent to

Methy Lake . Remnants of ancient shore line deposits indicate that the lake

level was formerly higher than at present .

Soils

A large proportion of the area is poorly drained, particularly south

of Methy Lake and along the river. The better drained medium textured upland

areas support a mixed-wood forest cover and the soils are mostly acidic Orthic

Gray Wooded with intergrading profiles to Podzol types .

The dominant soils on the heavier textured glacial till are Gray

Wooded Solodized Solonetz with hard angular blocky structure B horizons .

Exchangeable cation analyses indicate a moderate degree of solonetzic develop

ment with slight salinity in the C horizons of some of these profiles . The

lower poorly drained areas consist mainly faxmo of wooded muskegs, with Black

Spruce and Tamarack developed on thick sphagnum moss and sedge peat deposits .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered as unsuitable for extensive agriculture and of

low potential commercial forest development. Limited agricultural development

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has

occurred on the small areas of heavier textured soils adjacent to the

settlements

of La Loche and West La Loche where fairly successful gardens

have

been developed

.

The construction of the road from Buffalo Narrows to

La

Loche should provide greater opportunities for development within the area

.

D4.2

Buffalo River Plain

Location

and Drainage

The

Buffalo River Plain which lies generally below 1,500 feet elevation

occupies

the western portion of the Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland which receive

the

excess drainage of the eastern slopes of the Mostoos Uplands and discharges

them

through the Dillon, McCusker and Canoe Rivers and their tributaries to

Peter

Pond, Niska and Canoe Lakes

.

It

also includes the upper portion of the

Dillon

(Buffalo) River Valley which separates the Mostoos and Dillon Hills

.

The

northern portion of the area is drained by the Dillon River and

its

tributaries,the Vermette Creek and Nipin River and flows through a large

area

of wooded swamp land before reaching the settlement of Dillon on Peter

Pond

Lake

.

The central portion of the area including the Cumin Lakes are

drained

by the McCusker River and other small creeks to the south end of Peter

Pond

by way of Niska Lake

.

The southern part of this plain including the areas

adjacent

to Arsenault and Macallum Lakes are drained through Canoe Lake and

River

to Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse

.

Soils

Very

little is known of this area except through early base line

-

surveys,

limited traverses, aerial photo interpretation and forestry maps

;

thus

the soils information is meagre

.

The soils in the portion of the area

north

of the McCusker River are believed to be mainly Gray Wooded with some

Podzolized

and Bisequa Gray Wooded types developed on medium textured glacial

till .

Similar soils may occur on the alluvial-lacustrine deposits adjacent to

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- 69

the rivers . These soils support a largely mixed-wood vegetation . Numerous,

fairly large areas of bog and muskeg soils occur particularly adjacent to the

lower Dillon River, and west of Cumin Lake . A large area of deep peat soils

under wooded muskeg vegetation occur in the area northwest of Canoe Lake . This

large bog area is interspersed with local areas of upland soils, believed to

be Gray Wooded and Podzol types developed mainly on coarse textured glacio-

fluvial parent material . The extreme southerly portion of the area southwest

of Canoe Lake is apparently better drained and forest cover map indicate that

it supports a dominantly hardwood vegetation . The soils are believed to be

mainly Gray Wooded with significant inclusion of B_sequa Gray Wooded and

Podzol profile types on medium and coarse textured glacial deposits . A meagre

number of analyses on samples secured from the Canoe Lake area suggest that

the upland soils are moderately to strongly acidic and the parent materials

very low in lime carbonate . On the rather scanty data available it is

suggested that the soils are mainly very poor to non-arable .

D4.3 Kazan Lake Plain

Location and Drainage

The Kazan Lake Plain includes the very large area o£ wooded swamp land

of low relief extending for approximately 50 miles from southeast of Canoe

Lake northward to Kazan Lake, and lying between the relatively better drained

Buffalo River and the portion of the Ilea-la-Crosse Plains lying immediately

south of Peter Pond Lake . It lies at a general elevation of a little over

1,400 feet . External drainage from the southern portion of the area is through

Canoe Lake at 1,415 feet and the Canoe River which flows northeastward to

Ile-a-la-Crosse Lake . In the northern portion of the area external drainage

is obtained by way of Kazan Lake at 1,425 feet elevation to Peter Pond Lake

by way of the Kazan River . The McCusker River flows through the extreme

western portion of the plain to Niska Lake .

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Soils

Very little is known of the area except by base line traverses and

aerial photographic interpretation of forest cover. These indicate an extensive

area of deep peat soils developed on wooded muskeg with local ridges and upland

areas of Podzolic soils under Jack Pine or Aspen vegetation . The area is

believed to be underlain by coarse to medium textured glacial and fluvial

glacial deposits similar to most of the other portions of the Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse

Lowland .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered as unsuitable for agricultural or commercial

forest development because of the extensive conditions of poor drainage.

D4 .4 Ile-a-la-Crosse Plain

Location and Drainage

This plain constitutes the section of the Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland

extending southeastward from Peter Pond and Churchill Lakes in the northwest

to Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse and the Lower Beaver River Valley in the south and

east . It includes the settlements of Beauval and Ile-a-la-Crosse .

The area as a whole is well drained, but some large bogs and numerous

narrow bogs with a NW - SE trend occur.

Landform and Soil Parent Material

It forms a roughly undulating plain of mixed medium to coarse textured

glacial till, coarse sandy outwash and wind modified sandy alluvial deposits .

These soil parent materials are generally low in lime carbonate .

Soils

The upland soils are dominantly Gray Wooded, Bisequa Gray Wooded,

Podzols and Regosols characterized by coarse sandy textures and moderate to

strong acidity. Soils with lime carbonate subsoils are rare, but do occur

in local areas .

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The poorly . drained soils are mostly moderately deep to deep sphagnum

and woody peats overlying coarse textured materials.

Resource Evaluation

The soils are generally acidic, deficient in lime and of low fertility

and are considered to be unsuitable for extensive cultivation . Small acreages

have been cultivated with varying success at Beauval and Ile-a-la-Crosse, mostly

for garden produce and to supply local needs .

Jack Pine is the dominant forest vegetation on the sandy loam and

loamy sand upland areas, but extensive mixed wood cover also occurs, Fat particularly

where heavier texture subsoils exist . In the loamy sand to sandy areas the Jack

Pine cover usually is sparse and Aspen growth frequently dwarfed and stunted .

This is particularly evident in the area between Beauval and Fort Black .

Transportation in the area has been considerably improved by the

highway between Beauval and Buffalo Narrows with extensions to Fort Black and

Ile-a-la-Crosse . . This highway MKO may perhaps increase the resource opportunities .

D4 .5 Lower Beaver Valley

Although included as a subdivision within the Physiographic Divisions

included in the legend, the symbol D4 .5 was inadvertently left off the printed

soil map . The area is readily distinguished on the map by the light green

coloured narrow strip which occurs south of Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse and along the

east side of the Ile-a-la-Crosse Plain .

Location

This section includes the narrow band of alluvial flood plain deposits

adjacent to the Lower Beaver River and extending for about 40 miles from a

point just north of.Grand Rapids where the river cuts out of the plain to its

junction with Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse near Fort Black .

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Soils and their Agricultural Utilization

The soils are mainly shallow peaty meadows and peaty Rego-Gleysols

on variable textured alluvial deposits, which are frequently slightly to

moderately saline . These soils may be considered as suitable for pasture

and hay production, but unfortunately the Lower Beaver Valley is subject to

periodic flooding which has hampered its utilization in this regard .

E Saskatchewan Plains Region

The Saskatchewan Plains Region is a division within the Great Plains

Province of the Interior Plains of North America . On the accompanying map the

Saskatchewan Plains Region is indicated as having ten Section and forty-seven

Sub-sections . Nine of these Sections and their Sub-sections are described in

this report . The Assiniboine River Plain Section, identified on the southern

border of the map by the symbol E2, is not discussed because it is in the

agricultural region described in Soils Report No . 12 . Also because many of

the Sections included in the Saskatchewan Plains Region do not occur within the

Provincial Forest boundaries such areas are not described fully . Interested

readers are, however, referred to Soils Reports No . 12 and 13 for the detailed

descriptions of soils within the settled areas of those Sections indicated

on the Schematic . Map .

E3 Saskatchewan Rivers Plain

Location and Extent

These plains extend from the Alberta Uplands westward to the Manitoba-

Saskatchewan Lowlands, forming the broad valleys of the North and South

Saskatchewan Rivers and their tributaries .

Landforms

Gently undulating and rolling till plains are common through the area

but the release of large quantities of meltwater within the area has resulted

in considerable sorting of the glacial debris giving rise to fluvial plains of

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coarse outwash, sandy to medium textured alluvial, and finer textured

lacustrine deposits .

The northern sections of these plains descend from a general elevation

slightly above 1,750 feet where they break from the escarpment and hill lands

of the Alberta Uplands to about 1,500 feet where they merge with the Carrot

River Lowland .

Climate

The mean January temperature is between 0 and -20 F, for July it is

65 to 660 F, and the mean annual temperature is between 32 and 360 F . The

growing season lasts between 160 and 169 days, starting between April 25 and

30 and ending October 6 to 11 . The last spring frost is between June 1 and

10 and the first fall frost between September 1 and 10 . Thus there are 90 to

110 frost-free days . There are between 13 and 15 inches of annual precipitation

of which between 9 and 11 inches fall between May and September . When reviewing

the climatic data the reader is cautioned that this data encompasses the entire

Saskatchewan Rivers Plain which includes portions of short grass prairie to

the south . In the northern portion of the Saskatchewan Rivers Plain, the

growing season is probably shorter by a week, frost hazards are higher and

the precipitation is probably higher by 3 to 4 inches .

Vegetation

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is

mixedwood, made up of varying proportions of Aspen (Populus tremuloides) and

Balsam Poplar (P . balsamifera), White Birch (Betula papyifera), White Spruce

(Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea), the last two species especially

prominent in old stands . The cover type of greatest areal extent is the

Aspen, a result of the ability of this species to regenerate readily following

disturbance . In addition to its usual dominance on sandy areas, Jack Pine

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(Pinus banksiana) enters into the forest composition on the drier till soils,

and mixes with Black Spruce (Picea mariana) on the plateau-like tops of the

higher hills . Lower positions and the upper water-catchment areas develop

Black Spruce and Tamarack (Larix laricina) muskeg in which, however, the

accumulation of peat is not deep .

Geology and Soil Parent Material

The preglacial subsurface deposits are believed to be mostly of

Upper Cretaceous origin . The bedrock is not of particular significance as

most of the Saskatchewan Plain is mantled with glacial deposition of very

mixed bedrock origin giving rise to a heterogeneous medium textured calcareous

glacial till .

Soils

The Saskatchewan Rivers Plain includes areas within the Grassland,

Aspen-grove or Parkland, and Mixedwood Sections of the Boreal Forest .

Consequently, the soils range from Dark Brown, Black, and Gray Black

Chernozemic to Dark Gray and Gray Wooded Podzolic soils . The dominant soils

within the forested portion of the Saskatchewan Rivers Plain are Gray Wooded

with associated or meadow peaty Organic soils . The agricultural areas in

Reports No . 12 and 13 include Black and Dark Gray Chernozemic with Dark Gray

Wooded soils .

E3 .1 Paddockwood Plain

Physical Features

The Paddockwood Plain lies outside the Forest Reserves . It forms a

gently to roughly undulating till plain lying between the Waskesiu Upland to

the northwest, and the Montreal Lake Plain and Wapawekka Uplands to the north

and northeast, and is drained southward to the Saskatchewan by the Garden

River .

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Soils

The area lies within the Transition Parkland Forest Belt and the

soils are mainly medium textured Dark Gray Chernozemic and Dark Gray Wooded

soils developed mainly on calcareous moderately stony glacial till plus

associated peaty meadow and local areas of medium textured lacustrine deposits .

In imperfectly drained areas there is a dominance of Rego and Calcareous Dark

Gray soils in the Paddockwood and Weirdale Association plus peaty calcareous

meadows . Orthic .Dark Gray (slightly degraded) and Dark Gray Wooded (moderately

to strongly degraded) soils are found in upper better drained positions and

are mainly the Pelly and Whitewood Associations . Local areas of stony and

gravelly outwash soils also occur.

Agricultural Evaluation

The soils may he regarded as fair to good for agricultural production

with local areas of poor to very poor soil . Imperfect to poor drainage is a

limiting factor in much of the area . A large area of peaty soils occurs in

the intermittently flooded bed of Cheal Lake or Egg Lake. This has been

partially drained and has been developed as a hay and fodder project .

E3 .2 Spruce River Plain

Location and Extent

The Spruce River Plain lies mainly within the agricultural area north

of Prince Albert, and includes portions of the Little Red River and Sturgeon

Lake Indian Reserves which are largely forested . It also includes that

portion of the undulating to gently rolling marginal lake plain bordering the

portion of the Carrot River Lowland which is drained by the Spruce and

Sturgeon Rivers .

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Soils

The soil parent materials are very mixed, including variable textured,

glacial till, outwash, and alluvial lacustrine deposits . The area lies within

the Transition Parkland-Forest belt, and the Upland soils include Black and

Dark Gray Chernozemic and Dark Gray Wooded with associated poorly drained

meadows and peaty meadows . The soils include members of the Pelly, Paddockwood,

Whitewood, Kamsack, Weirdale, Shellbrook, Whitesand and Glenbush Associations

and the reader is referred to Soils Report No . '_3, and the Prince Albert and

Big River map sheets for further descriptions .

Agricultural Evaluation'

Agriculturally the area is considered as fair to good with the

exception of the coarse textured Whitesand and Glenbush soils, which together

with meadow bog soils, are poor to non-arable .

E3 .3 Nisbet Plain

Location and Extent

This area extends from Batoche and Duck Lake on the south branch

across the North Saskatchewan River to Holbein and then eastward to a point

about 8 miles east of the city of Prince Albert . Much of the area is

incorporated into various units of the Nisbet Provincial Forest but some lands

within the fringe of agricultural settlement are also included .

Landform

The Nisbet Plain includes the large areas of aeolian dunes and roughly

undulating to rolling wind modified sand plains lying between and adjacent to

the north and south branches of the Saskatchewan River.

Soils

The area extends from the northern edge of the grassland with Black

soils, through a Wooded-grassland transition area of Black and Dark Gray soils,

to Jack Pine forests on Podzolic soil profiles . On the fringes of the area

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where the sand plain merges with alluvial fine sandy loam soils, Dark Grav

and Black Chernozemic profiles occur comparable to those found in the Shollbrook

and Meota Associations . Some poorly drained areas of shallow peaty meadow soils

or occasionally thick organic peat soils also occur .

Most of the soils under forest cover are Orthic Gray Wooded (podzolized

sands) similar to those described in the Pine Sand Association, together xr1 with

some slightly 'leached Regosolic soils .

Resource Evaluation

Most of the area is unsuitable for cultivation and much of the area

south of the north Saskatchewan is unproductive for forestry . Good Jack Pine

stands have developed under good management practices in the Forest Reserves

north of Prince Albert, and these areas axxx have a commercial potential . They

are also valuable as recreational green belts, because of their proximity to

the urbanized area of Prince Albert .

E3 .4 Prince Albert Plain

Location

The Prince Albert Plain is a roughly undulating to gently rolling area,

lying between the north and south'branches of the Saskatchewan River and extending

westward from the junction of the Rivers at "The Forks" to the Nisbet aeolian

plains . With the exception of the small Steep Creek Provincial Forest, and

part of the Muskoday Indian Reserve most of the area which lies immediately

south of the city of Prince Albert is in agricultural settlement .

Soils and the Agricultural Evaluationwithin

The area lies wikk the Grassland to Forest transitional zone. Within

this zone Grassland Black, Transition Dark Gray and Forest Podzolic soils occur

on a complex of medium to coarse textured alluvial lacustrine, aeolian sands, and

glacial outwash deposits . Much of the area has been influenced by aeolian

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action . The soils of the area are described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 and

most of the area is included on the Prince Albert-Carrot River Map Sheet .

Associations identified include the Blaine Lake, Weirdale, Nipawin, Shellbrook,

La Co rn e, Sylvania and Glenbush together with areas of Podzolic Pine Sands and

aeolian dunes . This complex of soils, of variable textures and topography,

rate from poor to good in agricultural productivity .

The soils within the Steep Creek Forest Reserve are mainly sandy

textured Dark Gray Wooded and 0rthic Gray Wooded plus podzolized sands . These

are , considered unsuitable for agricultural development .

E3 .5 Shell River Plain

Location

The area lies to the south of the established Forest Reserves and

extends from the slopes of the Thickwood Hills Upland, near the village of

Shell Lake, eastward to the alluvial lacustrine plains near the town of

Shellbrook .

Landforms

The Shell River Plain forms a glacio-fluvial outwash plain of moderately

rolling to hilly and gently to moderately undulating topography with local areas

of rolling morainic till and undulating sandy alluvial deposits .

Drainage

It is drained by the Shellbrook and Mistawasis Creek which join

together to reach the Saskatchewan by means of the Sturgeon River. The

area includes a number of local lakes . Among these are Sandy, Fur, Mistawasis

and Royal Lakes .

Soils

The area lies within the Transition Parkland Forest Belt, and the

upland soils vary from Black Chernozemic grassland soils through various

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degrees of wooded degradation to Dark Gray Chernozemic, Dark Gray Wooded and

Gray Wooded types . The area where undisturbed is mostly wooded, and the Black

grassland soils are confined in the main to upper unshaded slopes and to the

coarse sandy outwash plain . Local areas of meadows, peaty meadows and organic

muskeg soils occupy the poorly drained kettles and the creek bottom areas .

The soils include the Whitesand, Glenbush, Whitewood, Shellbrook,

Sylvania and Pine Sand Associations with associated meadow and meadow-bog

soils . The reader is referred to the Big River Map Sheet and Soils Report

No . 13 for the location and further descriptions of these soils .

Resource Evaluation

Due to the dominance of coarse textured gravelly, sandy and stony soils,

plus the high percentage of rough topography, much of the area is considered

poor to unsuitable for agriculture . Most of the agricultural development

in the area is limited to local areas of more favourable topography and the

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heavier fine sandy loam and light loam textures .

It should be noted that apart from the limited agricultural exploitation,

portions of the area lie within the Atakakup and Mistawasis Indian Reserves

and these have supported a small indigenous population inx for many years .

A number of'the more hilly areas such as that occurring west of the

hamlet of Mont Nebo, are quite scenic, being well wooded and interspersed with

local lakes . The possibilities of preserving these areas for game and

wildlife, and the development of recreation facilities might be well considered .

The Canwood Provincial Forest Reserve was established on an area of

Pine Sand and meadow-bog.

In other poor to KM4[KSHx non-arable portions of the plain, community

pastures such as the one established in the Mount Royal Municipality might

be considered .

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E3 .6 Debden Plain

Location

Indian Reserve .

Landform

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The Debden Plain lies almost entirely in the agricultural area except

for a narrow strip in the northeast which enters on the Prince Albert National

Park, and a small area in the southwest which is included in the Atakakup

The area forms a gently undulating to rolling glacial drift plain of

relatively low relief, lying between the Waskesiu and Thickwood Hills Upland

to the east and west respectively, and boundaried on the north by the broad

divide at an elevation of approximately 1,750 feet between the Churchill and

Saskatchewan drainage systems . It has a general slope southward to its junction

with the Shellbrook lacustrine lake plain at about 1,650 feet .

Drainage

A large proportion of the area is poorly drained ; shallow lakes,

imperfectly drained meadows, and bog areas are common . Some external drainage

to the Saskatchewan system is effected by the Sturgeon River. Another ill

defined glacial channel drains a portion of the central area through Big Sucker

Lake and Sucker Creek .

Soils

The area lies within the Transition Parkland - Forest Zone and the

Upland soils are mostly Dark Gray Chernozemic and Dark Gray Wooded soils,

with some Gray Wooded soils in the more heavily forested areas . Most of these

soils have developed on rolling morainic and undulating ground moraine deposits

of medium textured, moderately highly calcareous glacial till, with local areas

of sandy and gravelly glacial outwash, and finer textured ponded alluvial

deposits . Many of the Dark Gray Chernozemic soils are imperfectly drained

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carbonated

~ Rego and Calcareous types although Orthic Dark Gray soils are

also common . Shallow Peaty and Calcareous Meadow soils with local Deep Peats

commonly occur in the low basins particularly those surrounding shallow

lakes or stream channels .

The reader is referred to Soils Report No . 13, and the Big River Map

Sheet for more specific location and description of the soils in the area .

These include members of the Pelly, Paddockwood, Whitewood and Waitville

Associations developed on glacial till, and the Whitesand and Glenbush on

glacial outwash deposits . The Pelly and Paddockwood soils are mainly Dark Gray

Chernozemic types occurring on gently undulating ground moraine, whereas the

Dark Gray Wooded Whitewood and Gray Wooded Waitville soils are most frequently

found on the roughly undulating to gently and moderately rolling topography.

Agricultural Evaluation

The area is considered as fair for agricultural production . The

Pelly, Paddockwood soils are fair to good but imperfect drainage is a handicap

in many areas . The soils of rougher topography and increased podzolization

are less desirable being fair to poor types . In addition such areas are

frequently quite stony . The Glenbush and Whitesand gravelly and sandy loam

soils are mainly considered as poor to very poor for agricultural production .

A number of the more extensive meadow and peaty meadow areas have been

successfully utilized for forage production and grazing . Such areas usually

required some drainage for efficient production .

E3 .7 Shellbrook Plain

Physical Features

The Shellbrook Plain, which lies almost entirely within the area of

agricultural settlement, forms a relatively large alluvial lacustrine plain

of silty and sandy deposits lying to the north of the Saskatchewan River and

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_ 82 _

west of Prince Albert . It is roughly centred on the town of Shellbrook. The

area, includes small portionsof the Sturgeon Lake and Mistawasis Indian Reserves .

In elevation the area varies from approximately 1,650 to 1,500 feet, and is

mainly gently to moderately undulating in topography, but includes some roughly

undulating to gently rolling areas . The main external drainage is by way of

the Shellbrook River and its tributaries .

Soils

The Shellbrook Plain lies within the Transition Parkland to Forest

Belt, and most of the upland soils are black to slightly degraded (Dark Gray

Chernozemic) types, Dark Gray Wooded soils occur mainly on the periphery of

the area where it borders the Nisbet and Spruce River Plains . Areas of meadow

and peaty meadow soils occur adjacent to the creek channels ; they also occur

in local flat to undrained depressions . In the latter areas leached meadow and

eluviated gleysol members also occur, The reader is referred to Soil Reports

No . 12 and 13, and accompanying maps for more detailed information on the

location and description of the soils in the area . The soils mapped include

the Meota, Shellbrook, Weirdale and Kamsack Associations with local areas of.

Blaine Lake .

Agricultural Evaluation

The area is rated as fair to good for agricultural production .

The Meota and Shellbrook soils are developed on sandy to sandy clay

loam alluvial deposits, and range in texture from fine sandy loam and very

fine sandy loam to light loam (sandy clay loam) . The more sandy textural phases

of these soils are susceptible to .wind erosion, lack drought resistance, and

rate only as fair agricultural soils .

The Kamsack and Weirdale soils range from loam and clay loam to silty

clay loam and are good agricultural soils . The smaller area of Blaine Lake

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soils, while of good texture, frequently include Solonetzic or saline soil

members and where these occur the Blaine Lake soils are inferior to the Weirdale

and Kamsack types . The uncultivated areas are treed, but forest production is

limited .

E5 White Gull Creek Plain

Physical Features

The White Gull Creek Plain forms a gently undulating to rolling, mixed

glacio-fluvial and glacial till plain, with a pattern of lakes, muskegs, drainage

cha~nels and ridges trending in a southeasterly direction . It slopes in general

from the borders of the Whiteswan section of the Wapawekka Uplands, at an

elevation of 1,750 to 1,800 feet, towards the Torch River Plain and Smeaton

Plain in the Carrot River Lowland at about 1,500 feet . The area is drained

externally by the White Gull Creek, Gull Creek and the Upper Torch River flowing

out of Candle Lake . The southwestern portion of the area is drained by Birchbark

Creek into Birchbark Lake, and from there to the White Fox River.

Climate

The mean January temperature is between -2 and -40 F, for July between

62 and 650 F, and annually between 30 and 310 F . The growing season starts

between April 30 and May 5 and ends between October 1 and 6, lasting between

148 and 160 days . The frost-free period is between 80 and 90 days . The

last spring frost occurs between June 1 and 10, and the first fall frost between

August 20 and September 1 . The annual precipitation is 16 to 18 inches of

which 10 to 11 inches fall between May and September .

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84

Soils

The Upland soils are mainly Podzolic and Gray Wooded soils with

associated Podzolized Gray Wooded, Bisequa Gray Wooded, and Orthic Podzols . The

parent materials are medium textured stony glacial till, coarse textured sKKKdYL

sandy gravelly outwash deposits . In some areas the outwash deposits are thin

overlying the glacial till . Coarse textured soils predominate . A number of

fairly large muskeg areas of Shallow Organic Peat soils occur . The Podzolic

soils developed on glacial till are most nearly comparable to the Waitville

loam and light loam soils as described in Soils Report No . 13, while the soils

on the gravelly and sandy deposits are similar to those described for the

Bodmin and Pine Associations .

Resource Evaluation

The area is unsuitable for agricultural development due to the dominance

of coarse textured Podzolic soils, which are low in organic matter, natural

fertility, and drought resistance. The large areas of muskeg soils are mainly

sphagnum or woody peat types and although not generally deep, are not consideredtheirto have the productive capability to warrant drainage for development .

The area is supporting a good growth of soft woods, dominantly Jack

Pine, on the uplands, with Spruce in wet areas .

E6 Montreal Jake Plain

Physical Features

The Montreal Lake Plain forms a relatively narrow area of low relief,

between 1,750 and 1,600 feet in elevation, lying between the Waskesiu Upland

to the west, and the White Swan section of the Wapawekka Upland on the east .

It may be considered as a gently undulating to rolling stream modified till

plain with local glacio-fluvial features, forming a shallow divide between the

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r

85

..

Churchill and Saskatchewan drainage systems . The main drainage is through

Bittern and Montreal Lakes to the Churchill system by way of the Montreal

River, with only minor drainage southward to the Saskatchewan .

Climate

The mean January temperature is between -2 and -60 F, for July between

62 and 630 F, and annually between 31 and 321 F . The growing season starts

between April 30',and May 5 and ends between October l and 6, lasting between

148 and 160 days . The frost-free period is between 80 to 90 days . The last

spring frost could occur between June 10 and 20-, and the first fall frost

between August 20 and September l . The annual precipitation is between 16 and

18 inches of which between 10 and 11 inches fall between May and September .

Divisions

Due to a cartographic error on the accompanying map, the legend

indicates two subdivisions of the area, the Bittern Lake Plain, E6 .1 and the

Montreal Lake Plain, E6 .2 .

Unfortunately this latter subdivision is not

indicated on the map . The area can be conveniently considered in three sections,

first the Bittern Lake Plain, E6 .1, lying to the south of the narrow divide

between Bittern and Montreal Lakes ; and secondly and thirdly the west and east

sides of the Montreal Lake Plain as E6 .2a and E6 .2b, respectively, which are

subdivided by the main body of the lake .

E6 .1 Bittern Lake Plain

This area has a landform pattern with a distinctive north-south

lineation as shown by the shape of the lakes, elongated muskeg areas and long

narrow ridges of till and outwash which are separated by areas of undulating

till plain . Such a pattern suggests that the area served as a glacial

meltwater channel in former times .

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Soils

- 86 -

The upland soils are mainly Gray Wooded with some int.ergrades to

Podzols, developed on medium textured glacial till . Local coarse textured

soils developed_on outwash frequently occur. These upland soils are similar

to the Waitville and Bodmin Associations . The soils in undrained depressions

and drainage channels are mostly organic deep peats of mixed sedge, woody,

and sphagnum moss types . The area extends into the settlement north of

Paddockwood which is considered as having a low agriculture potential .

This

is mainly due to the wide occurrence of roughly ridged landscapes of medium

to coarse textured and stony podzolic soils with lows of deep muskeg peat

which lack drainage .

Very limited areas of fair to good soils also occur. They consist

of slightly to moderately stony Gray Wooded loams to clay loams, on undulating

to gently rolling topography . There does not appear to be enough of these

latter soils to expect any significant agricultural development of the Bittern

Lake area .

E6 .2a Montreal Lake Plain - West Portion

This section can be conveniently subdivided into a west and east half

by Montreal Lake, which extends for approximately 32 miles north and south, and

varies from 2 to over 8 miles in width .

The west half is a gently rolling to undulating till plain which

slopes from the Waskesiu and Thunder Hills Uplands towards the lake, and

carries drainage from the higher lands by way of the Waskesiu, Crean, MacLennan

and Weyakwin Rivers .

A small community of native population is centred near the Indian

Reserve at the southwest end of Montreal Lake .

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Soils

- 8 7 -

The Upland soils are mainly Gray Wooded and Gray Wooded-Podzol intergrades

on medium to moderately fine textured, calcareous glacial till, with local areas

of Gray Wooded and Podzol soils on coarse textured outwash . Mixtures of Gray

Wooded and Organic Peat soils form a complex distribution pattern, particularly

in the southwestern portion of the area . Examination of some Gray Wooded

profiles on the glacial till sites indicate that they are somewhat heavier in

texture, slightly less calcareous, and more water sorted than the modal concept

of the medium textured Waitville types . Although different in appearance, theyr

may be considered as comparable to the heavier textured Waitville soils .

Resource Evaluation

Except for the possibility of. limited development for local needs

adjacent to the Montreal Lake settlement, it is suggested that the area on

the west side of Montreal Lake be utilized for forest production . Much of

the area is supporting a vigorous mixedwood growth, with softwoods predominating,

on the coarser textured soils .

E6 .2b Montreal Lake Plain - East Portion

This area extends in a narrow belt on the east side of the Lake from

the Indian Reserve settlement at the south end, to the settlement of Molanosa

at the north end of the Lake . It is easily accessible being traversed in its

entirety by the main highway from Waskesiu to La Ronge,

It has been considered separately from the Bittern and West Montreal

Lake Sections, because it represents a relatively uniform, gently undulating

till plain, of medium to fine textured Gray Wooded loam and clay loam soils .

Limited amounts of Organic soils, ranging from shallow to deep peats also occur.

Soils

The Gray Wooded soils are distinct from, but comparable to, the heavier

textured Waitville soils . The amount of stones vary from slight to moderately

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heavy . Local gravelly areas also occur. The combination of medium heavy

Gray Wooded soils on good topography indicate the possibilities of limited

agricultural development for local needs .

E7 Beaver River Plain

Location

The Beaver River Plain forms part of the Churchill drainage basin and

includes the areas lying between the Mostoos and Thickwood . Uplands to the west

and south and the Waskesiu Uplands to the east . It extends northward from the

Saskatchewan-Churchill divide located south of the town of Big River at anI

elevation of 1,750 feet to the Ilea-la-Crosse Lowland below 1,500 feet .

Landforms

Considerable water modification and sorting of the till deposit has

occurred, and rolling and undulating morainic plains are interspersed with

variable stream modified till, outwash, and local alluvial lacustrine plains .

The effects of intense glacial drainage are very apparent in the Big River

Section between the Thickwood and Waskesiu Uplands . This low divide at about

1,750 feet was apparently the drainage course for much of the glacial meltwaters

from the Beaver Valley and Hyper Churchill area flowing to the Saskatchewan lakes

during the period in which the lower outlets to the Churchill drainage were

blocked by ice . Ridges of outwash gravels, and elongated lakes and bogs with

a general northwest to southeast trend within areas of stony stream eroded

plains are general indications of these conditions,

Drainage

The area may be divided into two drainage sections, the western portion

or Beaver Section which includes the broad valley plain of the Upper Beaver

and Waterhen Rivers, and the southeast or Big River Section which drains the

northeastern slopes of the Thickwood Upland and Witchekan, Chitek, Big River

and Delaronde Plains by means of the Cowan and Big Rivers .

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Climate

The January mean temperature is between .2 and -40 F, July's is between

62 and 630 F and annually between 32 and 330 F, The growing season starts

between April 25 and 30 and ends between October 1 and 6, lasting between 154

and 169 days . The last spring frost occurs between June 10 and 20, and the first

fall frost between August 20 and September 1 ; giving between 70 and 80 frost-free

days . The annual precipitation is from 14 to 16 inches of which between 9 and

l0-inches occur between May and September .

Geology and Soil Parent Material

Upper Cretaceous shales are presumed to underlie the surficial glacial

deposits . Members of the Colorado group comparable to the Favel beds in the

east have been identified in the Green Lake area, but it is probable that the

non-calcareous Lea Park shales of the Montana group are present . Much of the

glacial material in the Beaver River Plain is significantly lower in lime

carbonate, and slightly heavier in texture, than that found in the Saskatchewan

Plains or the Waskesiu Upland to the east .301, 1s

The well drained soils range from Dark Gray Chernozemic (slightly

Degraded Black) and Dark Gray Wooded to Gray Wooded and Podzolic sands . The

poorly drained soils vary from peaty meadows and thin sedge peaty to deep

sphagnum types . Within the Beaver River plain a number of isolated areas of

Transition Gray-Black soils occur as "islands" in the broad zonal belt of Gray

Wooded soils . Many of these Dark Gray Chernozemic and Dark Gray Wooded soils .

particularly in ,the Upper B~4ver Valley have been successfully cultivated,

except for coarse textured or stony types . Among the larger and better known

areas of these soils are the Meadow Lake, Makwa, and Witchekan Lake Plains,

although many other small areas of such soils also occur. Limited agricultural

development has taken place on Gray Wooded soils of medium to fine texture, on

suitable topography,

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The soils within the agricultural areas have been described in Soils

Report No . 13, and are delineated '

i on the accompanying Big River and

Meadow Lake map sheets .

For this reason the following descriptions of the

soils in the individual sub-sections will deal mainly with those within the

forest boundaries, and the soils in the agricultural area will be referred to

by the Soil Associations name reported in the aforementioned text .

The Beaver River Plain has been divided into nineteen sub-sections

which lie partly within the agricultural districts and partly within the borders

of the Provincial Forest .

E7 .1 Pierceland Plain

Location

The Pierceland Plain occupies the most westerly extension of the Beaver

River Plains, and with the exception of a small portion in the Big Head Indian

Reserve, is entirely within the boundaries of agricultural settlement. It lies

to the northeast of the village of Pierceland and includes the settlement of

Beacon Hill on Provincial Highway No . 55 .

Landform

The area forms a relatively inextensive, gently sloping to moderately

undulating till plain with local areas of rolling morainic till and undulating

outwash deposits . It extends from elevations of above 1,900 feet at its

border with the Alberta Uplands to about 1,660 feet at Lac des Isles on the Waterhed

River. The undulating till plain appears to have been partially modified by

water action as the glacial material is frequently highly sorted or water modified

by shallow lacustrine deposits . A number of local poorly drained flats occur,

but much of the area is reasonably well drained by creeks flowing to the Bearer

and Waterhen Rivers .

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Soils

The Pierceland Plain forms an isolated zonal area of Transition Gray

Black soils surrounded by Gray Wooded soils, and in this respect is similar

to the Goodsoil, Makwa, Meadow Lake and Dorintosh Plains . It is of interest

to note that these are all relatively low lying plains of lacustrine or lake

modified deposits, and it is probable that the occurrence of Dark Gray soils

in these areas is a reflection of a history of late emergence from an

imperfectly drained condition unfavourable to tree growth .

The Upland soils are mainly Dark Gray Chernozemic and Dark Gray Wooded

types with local areas of Gray Wooded soils on the glacial till and outwash

deposits . They include the Makwa, Horsehead and Loon River Associations, with

local occurrence of Bodmin soils . The sails of the poorly drained flats are

mostly meadow and peaty meadow types . Some of these peats are deep enough to

be classified as organic soils .

Resource Evaluation

The area has a fair to good agricultural potential .

The Makwa and

Horsehead clay loam and loam soils may be considered as good to fair for

agricultural production but the Gray Wooded Loon River loams are somewhat

inferior, fair to poor types . The local areas of outwash soils are chiefly

very poor or non-arable types . Many of the meadow bog soils are underlain by

similar modified till parent materials to that of the Makwa and Horsehead soils .

Where drainage is economical, these bog soils can be successfully developed,

becoming fair to good agricultural types for coarse grains or forage production .

E7 .2 Goodsoil Plain

The Goodsoil Plain, which is centred on the village of that name, lies

entirely within agricultural settlement .

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Landform

It constitutes a mixed gently sloping to roughly undulating till plain

with a general drainage slope from the Beaver Uplands above 1,800 feet, to the

Upper Waterhen Plain below 1,700 feet elevation . Although the area is externally

drained by creeks flowing to the Waterhen River there are many local poorly

drained flats . It is apparent that much of the glacial till has been modified

by water action, and areas of lake modified till and local lacustrine deposits

are common .

Soils

The area forms a local zone of Transition Gray Black soils, surrounded

by Gray Wooded areas similar to those of the Pierceland Plain . Dark Gray

Wooded and Gray Wooded soils of the Horsehead and Loon River Associations are

dominant on most of the glacial till uplands . Dark Gray Chernozemic and Dark

Gray Wooded soils of the Makwa and Horsehead Associations usually occur in the

lower modified till areas .

Limited areas of Meadow Lake and Dorintosh soils occur on shallow

lacustrine clay deposits . Local areas of Bodmin soils on coarse textured outwash

sands and gravels also occur. Areas of Meadow and Peaty Meadows, (meadow bog

complex) occur in flats, or. adjacent to stream channels . Many of these peaty

soils are underlain by a variety of deposits from coarse textured sands to fine

textured clays . Some peat areas are slightly saline .

Soils Evaluation

The Goodsoil Plain constitutes an area of fair agricultural soils .

The Makwa and Meadow Lake soils are considered good types, but in some places

are handicapped because of imperfect drainage . The Horsehead soils are

considered as fair and the Loon River as poor to fair .

In meadow bog areas where subsoils are satisfactory, and drainage

established forage production can be successfully developed .

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E7 .3 Makwa Plain

The Makwa Plain constitutes one of the larger areas of agricultural

settlement in the Beaver River Plain, and is centredon the settlements of

Loon Lake and South Makwa .

Landform

The Makwa or translating from the Cree language, Loon Plain, is a

gently rolling and undulating till plain . The general relief is between 2,0.00

and 1,700 feet . It slopes from an embayment in the northern face, of the

Bronson-Meadow Lake Hills section, of the Thickwood Hills Upland to the Upper

Beaver Plain subsection . The area forms a collection basin for the excess drainage,

from portions of the Thickwood Hills, thus much of the lower portions of the

plain are imperfectly to poorly drained .

Drainage

External drainage is effected by a number of creeks and rivers which flow

northward to the Beaver drainage . Among these are the Horsehead, Rabbit and Morin

Creeks which originate in the Thickwood Hills, and the Makwa or Loon River which

drains the Makwa Lakes .

Soils

Much of the area shows evidence of water action, and there is considerable

evidence of shallow lacustrine or alluvial deposition modifying the glacial till

deposits . Limited areas of sandy alluvial and coarser textured outwash deposits

also occur. The Makwa Plain is part of a general area of Transitional Gray-

9X Black soils which extends northeastward to include the Meadow Lake and

Dorintosh Lake Plains. The dominant soil association is the Makwa . It consists

mainly of Dark Gray Chernozemic loam to clay loams on highly water modified

glacial till which is associated with glacial lake deposition . Dark Gray

Wooded, Dark Gray Solonetzic and Meadow soils also occur in the Makwa Association .

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Local areas of Meadow Lake and Beaver lacustrine clay loams are

associated with the Makwa soils . Dark Gray Wooded soils developed on relatively

low-lime glacial till are dominant in the Horsehead Association,

These soils are

associated both with the Makwa and Loon River Associations . The latter are Gray

Wooded soils developed on similar till to the Horsehead and occur mainly on the

rolling morainic uplands . Limited areas of Glenbush, Bodmin, on outwash deposits,

and Shellbrook and Sylvania, on fine sandy alluvial deposits, occur locally.

Extensive areas of meadow bog complex including Meadow, Peaty Meadow

and Deep Peat soils occur adjacent to the Makwa ~iver, and other creek channels .

Many of these soils overlie lake modified till deposits .

Soil Evaluation

The Makwa Plain may be considered as one of the better agricultural

areas in the Beaver River Plain . The predominance of Makwa soils contribute to

this good rating for agricultural production . The imperfect drainage and local

solonetzic conditions within the Makwa Association are considered as adverse

.factors . The Horsehead and Loon River soils are considered as fair to poor,

and rolling topography and excessively stony conditions are further disadvantages

of these types .

E7 .4 Upper Beaver Plain

Landform and Extent

The Upper Beaver Plain is an undulating to strongly rolling, glacio-

fluvial and outwash plain with a general relief between 1,800 and 1,700 feet .

It forms an area extending northward from the Meadow Lake Hills to the Waterhen

River, and descends from the glacial till areas of the Makwa Plain and Beaver

Uplands in the west, to the,Dorintosh and Meadow Lake lacustrine plains to the

east . For many years it lay entirely within the agricultural area, but most

of the plain north of the Beaver River has been recently incorporated into

the Northern Provincial Forest .

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Drainage

Much of the area is relatively well drained but a number of poorly

drained basins occur, particularly adjacent to smaller stream courses . The

Beaver River and its tributary the Makwa River has cut fairly deep valleys

through the plain .

The southern part of the area is drained by the upper portions of a

series of waterways, among them Morin Creek and the Meadow River, which flow

into the Meadow Lake lacustrine plain .

Soils

The Upland soils are dominantly Gray Wooded with some intergrades to

Podzols . They are developed on coarse textured, gravelly-sandy outwash and

alluvial sands, and some medium textured glacial till . The till soils are

frequently stony . These soils have been mapped in the Bodmin, Pine, Sylvania

and Loon River Associations . The area lying between the Beaver and Waterhen

River is dominantly Bodmin gravelly sandy loam and Pine Sand with local areas

of meadow bog . Smaller areas of Dark Gray Wooded soils have been mapped in

the Horsehead, Makwa and Shelibrook Associations . The mixed areas of Meadow

and Organic soils-have been shown as meadow-bog complexes, and these are

frequently mixed with, or underlain by, coarse textured materials .

Soil Evaluation

Most of the soils are rated as poor, and very poor for agricultural

production . Much of the area is considered as non-arable, with the exception

of a few local areas of Loon Lake, Horsehead and Makwa soils.on undulating

topography . Limited settlement took place in this area during the nineteen

thirties but with relatively little success, and some abandonment has

subsequently taken place.

Much of the area is wooded and, on the sandy upland soils, supports a

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fluvial and alluvial deposits extending

approximately 50 miles on both sides of

in width from 3 to 6 miles . It extends

to a few miles east of Greig Lake where

the Lower Waterhen Plain .

Well developed mixed-wood growthreasonably vigorous stand of Jack Pine .

occurs along the river valley slopes, and on the heavier textured till soils .

As previously mentioned, the portion of these plains north of the Beaver

River i'g' within the Provincial Forest .

E7 .5

Upper Waterhen Plain

Location and Extent

The Upper Waterhen Plain forms a narrow elongated area of glacio-

in a general east-west direction for

the Upper Waterhen River and varying

from Pierce (Trout) Lake in the west

it merges into the wider expanse of

It has an overall relief between 1,750 and 1,600

feet . It is boundaried on the north by the prominent escarpment of the Mostoos

Hills Upland which rises to heights of over 2,200 feet, and on the south by the

Pierceland, Goodsoil and Dorintosh Plains . The Waterhen River forms a natural

boundary marking the limit of agricultural expansion in northwestern Saskatchewan .

Settlement has penetrated into some portions of the plain south of the Waterhen

River, but most of the Upper Waterhen Plain is within the Provincial Forest

boundaries and forms a major part of the Meadow Lake Provincial Park.

Drainage

The area is drained by the Waterhen River which originates in Cold Lake

at an elevation of 1,755 feet and quickly descends for about 6 miles from the

Alberta High Plains through a series of rapids to Pierce Lake at 1,675 feet

where it enters the fluvial plain . From there it flows through Lac des Isles, .

(Big Island Lake), at 1,660 feet to the Waterhen Lake at 1,570 feet, a total

drop through the plain of 105 feet, A number of other individual lakes occur

between the Mostoos Escarpment and the Waterhen River. These include Greig,

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Kimball, Mustus, Peitahigan and Mistohay Lakes . Some of which are surrounded

by meadow flats .

Soils

Only limited soil examinations have been made in this area to date . The

upland soils are believed to be mostly Gray Wooded, Gray Wooded-Podzol intergrades

and Podzols, developed on mixed areas of medium and coarse textured glacial,

glacio-fluvial and sandy alluvial deposits .

materials are dominant . The poorly drained soils are mostly peaty meadow and

meadow bog types .

Sandy soils on coarse textured

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered as unsuitable for extensive agricultural

development . A potential for commercial forest production is present as the

area is reasonably well wooded, and supports a good growth of Jack Pine . The

recreational potential of the lakes and woods in this area has been recognized

for many years and much of the area is now being developed to this .end through

the establishment of the Meadow Lake Provincial Park .

E7 .6 Keeley Lake Plain

Location and Extent

The Keeley Lake Plain is a fairly extensive, undulating to rolling

area which slopes from the base of the Mostoos Escarpment, of the Alberta High

Plains, eastward to the Lower Waterhen Plain, and northward from the Upper

Waterhen Plain, near G reig and Waterhen Lakes, to the Buffalo River Plain in

the Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowlands south of Canoe Lake . The area lies entirely

within the boundaries of the Provincial Forest and part is included in the

Meadow Lake Provincial Park .

It varies from 8 to 15 miles in width from west

to east and extends about 50 miles in a northerly direction .

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Drainage

The overall elevations range from a little above 1,650 feet at the

base of the escarpment to the river draining north from Keeley Lake which lies

at an elevation of 1,491 feet . The area receives considerable drainage from

the Mostoos Escarpment, and this flows through a series of creeks and lakes

to the Waterhen and Keeley Rivers . Major lakes within the area include Greig,

Jeannette, Flotten (1,591 feet), and Keeley Lake (1,491. feet), and there are

a number of smaller lakes and fairly extensive meadow-bogs .

Landform and Parent Material

The area may be considered as a mixed glacio-fluvial and till plain

with local alluvial-lacustrine deposits . The soils are mostly developed on

coarse textured gravelly sandy outwash, sandy alluvial, and slightly calcareous

stony glacial till deposits . Frequently the coarse textured deposits occur as

a shallow overlay on the glacial till . Finer textured alluvial lacustrine

parent materials occur in local areas, frequently as overlays .on coarser

textured materials. .

Soils

The Upland soils are dominantly Gray Wooded, intergrading to Bisequa

Gray Wooded on the medium textured deposits, with Gray Wooded to Podzol types

occurring on the coarser textured deposits . Most of the Upland soils are

moderately acidic in the A and B horizons and the subsoils are deficient or

low in lime carbonate content .

Deep .organic, sphagnum or mixed sedge and woody peats occupy the

poorly drained bog sites . These areas are mainly underlain by coarse textured

sandy or stony subsoils .

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Resource Evaluation

The area is considered as unsuitable for agricultural development because

of the dominance of acid podzolic soils and unsuitable subsoils . The forest

cover is mostly hardwoods and Jack Pine, the latter being the dominant softwood

species . Areas of commercial White and Black Spruce are limited . The

potentiality of the area for recreational development has been recognized for .

many years and the southern portion of the area including Greig, Jeannotte and

Flotten Lakes have been incorporated into the newly established Meadow Lake

Provincial Park .

E7 .7

Dorin tosh Plain

Location and Extent

The Dorintosh Plain forms a small area of undulating alluvial lacustrine

sp soils, approximately 25,000 to 30,000 acres in extent, lying between the

Beaver and Waterhen Rivers in the agricultural area northwest of Meadow Lake .

It represents the northern portion of a fairly extensive glacial lake basin in .

the Beaver River Plain, which is separated from the southern portion of Meadow

Lake Plain by the Beaver River . It ranges in saia elevation between 1,750 and

1,600 feet .

Soils

The soils, which are described sax in Soil Survey Report No . 13 and

delineated on the Meadow Lake Map Sheet, are developed on sandy to silty clay

alluvial lacustrine deposits with local areas of slightly calcareous glacial

till and outwash deposits . The alluvial lacustrine soils are dominantly Gray

Wooded and Dark Gray Wooded with local development of Podzolic-Solonetzic, and

gleyed Gray Wooded profiles described in the Dorintosh, Beaver and Sylvania

Associations . The Podzolic Dorintosh soils are mostly Orthic Gray Wooded soils .

The Beaver soils are dominantly moderately degraded, Dark Gray Wooded profiles

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with Ali horizons from 3-_`i inches in thickness . The Gray Wooded soils on till

and outwash deposits are correlated with the Loon River and Bodmin Associations .

Local areas of mixed thin and thick peat, meadow bog soils occur overlying

similar alluvial lacustrine deposits to the Dorintosh and Beaver soils . The

area is considered as fair to good for agricultural development .

E7 .8 Meadow Lake Plain

Location

The Meadow Lake Plain includes a large portion of the glacial lake

basin lying between the Meadow Lake Hills to the south and the Beaver River

to the north . The area is centred on the town of Meadow Lake, an old settlement

with a history dating back to the xx early days of the fur trade . Most of the

area has been settled . It also includes the Meadow Lake Indian Reserve .

Landform and Drainage

The Meadow Lake Plain forms an undulating to flat lacustrine basin witl;

an overall elevation from approximately 1,750 to 1,600 feet . It receives c1XCOSS

drainage by creeks flowing from the Meadow Lake Hills to the south and the

Upper Beaver Plain to the west and consequently the lower and flatter portions

of the area are imperfectly drained and are liable to flooding particularly

in wetter years .

Meadow Lake with an elevation of 1,650 feet is apparently

a residual remnant of a former larger glacial lake . External drainage is effected

by the Meadow Lake River, Morin Creek and other smaller streams which flow to

the Beaver River.

Soils

The soils are described in Saskatchewan Soil Survey Report No . 13 and .

delineated on the accompanying Meadow Lake Map Sheet . They occur as an island

of Black and Dark Gray (Degrading Black) soils within the main Gray Wooded Soil

Zone . It is likely that the soils have developed under grass and tree invasion

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t)1 - fk)r-mor imperfectly drained meadow ::oily; . The imperfectly to well drain< "d

soils are dominantly Black and Dark Gray soils of the Solonetzic ;ind Chernozenlic

Orders with associated meadow and peaty meadow

They are mainly developed

on medium to fine textured silty lacustrine deposits of the Meadow Lake and

Beaver Associations . - Local areas of Dark Gray Wooded soils on alluvial sands

and glacial till deposits occur on the southern margins of the lake plain . These

include the Shellbrook, Makwa and Horsehead Associations . Fairly extensive peaty

meadow soils are found in the flatter areas adjacent to the Meadow Lake .

Agricultural Evaluation

The area is well developed agriculturally and most of the soils are

considf, red as fair to good . Frost hazard and short growing seasons are considrrc " (l

as hazards to cropping, but are not as hazardous in the Meadow Lake Plain as in

thl> surrounding areas .

E7 .9 St . Cyr Plain

Location

The St . Cyr Plain is a narrow area of rolling to hilly topography which,

together with the gently to roughly undulating Chitek Lake Plain, separates the

Bronson-Meadow Lake Hills to the west, from the Leoville Hills to the east . It

also forms the local divide between the Beaver River drainage to the northwest

alld the Big River drainage to the southeast � The northwestern portion of the

area is sparsely settled . . The majority of the area is within the Big River

Section of the Northern Provincial Forest .

Landform

The area is basically a glacio-fluvial plain,'of mixed medium textured

glacial till and coarse textured outwash deposits . These deposits have been

partially modified by subsequent sandy alluvial deposition and aeolian activity,

giving rise to areas of complex topography.

This complex of materials was

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apparently deposited in a periled of intrn :;cpro and post glacial druinagc

Glacial Lake Hyper- Churchill towards the Sask,it(-liewan River systems, to tltir

southeast .

Drainage

Present day drainage is mainly towards the Beaver River through the

Chitek River flowing to Meadow Lake, and Tea Creek which begins in a series

of narrow meadows on the Big River-Beaver divide, and flows northward to

Green Lake .

Soils

The Upland soils are mainly Gray Wooded, with some intergrading to

Podzoel types . In the settled area the soils on alluvial and aeolian sands occur

on strongly rolling to hilly topography of the Pine and Sylvania Associations .

Poedzolic soils developed on outwash and glacial till within the forest reserve

are correlative with roughly undulating to strongly rolling phases of the

Bodmin and Loon .River Associations . Areas of poorly drained peaty meadow and

bog soils are of local occurrence .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered as unsuitable for extensive agricultural (li-vvlop-

ment because of the dominance of coarse to medium textured Podzolic soils associalo,l

with roughly rolling and hilly topography .

Extensive fires in the past have destroyed much of the potentially

merchantable timber, particularly outside of the forest reserve boundaries .

Jack Pine is the dominant softwood on the Sylvania and Pine soils . Burnt over

areas are characterized by a scrubby mixed wood cover. The capability for

sustained forest growth may be considered as fair.

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E7 .10 Lower Waterhen Plain

Lcica t ion

The I,c,wc'r Wnterhcn Plaice is one of the larger sub-sm ions of the

Beaver River Plain, and includes all the area lying between the Keeley Lake

to the west and the Dorintosh Plains to the southwest, and the Beaver River

can the south and east, It extends approximately 45 miles in a north-south

direction from the Beaver Plain Lo the Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland, and varies in

width from less than 6 to over 30 miles . It has a general elevation between

1,600 and 1,500- feet .

With the exception of portions of Townships 61 and 62,

Ranges 16 and 17, west of the Ad Meridian, the area lie, entirely within the

boundaries of the provincial forest . If also includes Indian Reserve No . 130,

ad jacenL

to Waterhen Lake .

Drainage

Au main external drainage is by means of thv Watvrhpn River which

flows through Waterhen lake to join the Beaver River in Township 65 ., above the

Grand Rapids, Some local drainage flows to the Beaver River which forms the

southern and eastern border of the area . Despite this external drainage many

large sections of the area are imperfectly to poorly drained .

Landform

The area is considered as a gently undulating to rolling glacio-fluvial

and alluvial plain dominated by coarse textured sandy deposits . Smaller areas

of medium to coarse textured glacial till are believed to occur southeast of

Kee ley Lake .

Soils

The Upland soils are dominantly sandy textured Gray Wooded types with

intergrades . t o Podzols . They occur mainly on undulating to gently rolling

topography . Large areas of peaty meadows and deep peats occur, and the

vegetative pattern also indicates extensive areas of mixed upland and peaty

soils .

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Resource Evaluation

The potential productivity is believed to be largely unsuitable for

agricultural development . The Podzolic soils on coarse gravelly and stony

loams and on sands and :kg loamy sands are considered as poor to non-arable

types . Limited traverses into the Waterhen Plain east of the Dorintosh

settlement confirms this opinion . The extensive areas of peaty soils may have

some future potential for development of hay and pasture crops if adequately

drained .

The commercial forest potential of the area is apparently limited by the

poor productive capacity of the coarse textured soils, and the fair to good

productivity, for Aspen and White Spruce, on the imperfectly drained medium

textured xaz tills . Jack Pine is the main softwood that occurs and some stands

are merchantable . Many areas are dominated by an Aspen hardwood cover .

Tamarack and Spruce are present in the poorly drained areas but productive

stands are not extensive .

E7 .11 Beaver Plain

Physical Features

The Beaver Plain forms a broad belt of level to undulating glacial

alluvial and flood plain deposits, whose general elevation is between 1,500

and 1,550 feet . It lies adjacent to the Beaver River and its tributaries, .the

Morin Creek and the Meadow River. It extends eastward from the Beaver River

Valley, in the Upper Beaver Plain, for approximately 35'miles to the junction

of the Beaver and Green Rivers north of Green Lake . The Beaver River forms

the major portion of the northern boundary o£ this area and separates it from

the Lower Waterhen Plain . Much o£ the area, particularly in the vicinity of

the creeks and rivers is poorly drained and subject to periodic flooding .

Although the area is not within the provincial forest, settlement is

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sparse . A limited number of ranches occur adjacent to the Beaver River flats .

Soils

The soils are described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 and are shown on

the accompanying Meadow Lake Map Sheet .

The surface deposits are mainly alluvial sands and sandy loams, some

of which have been modified by wind action . Local areas of medium textured

alluvial lacustrine deposits are found in some areas . A rolling belt of coarse

textured outwash sands occurs in the area north of St . Cyr Lake ; and glacial

till deposits occur in the Island Hill area which rises as a minor elevation

within the plain .

The Upland sandy soils are mostly Podzolic-Gray Wooded types similar

to the Pine and Bodmin Associations . Local areas of Gray Wooded Dorintosh,

Loon River and Sylvania soils, and Dark Gray Wooded Beaver and Shellbrook soils

also occur . The poorly drained areas are indicated as a meadow-bgg complex,

being mostly peaty meadow soils overlying sandy deposits .

Resource Evaluation

With the exception of the local areas of Shellbrook, Sylvania, Dorintosh

and Beaver, the Upland soils are poor to unsuitable for agricultural development .

The meadow bog soils are used mainly for hay and forage productions for the

ranching enterprises of the area . This utilization is often limited because

of the frequency of flooding . The area has little potential for commercial

forest development .

E7 .12 Witchekan Lake Plain

Location

The Witchekan Lake Plain comprises a basin of comparatively low relief,

with a general elevation between 2,100 and 1,900 feet, lying within the main

portion of the Thickwood Hills Upland . It is bordered on the west by the

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Bronson Meadow Lake Hills, on the south by the Thickwood Hills, and on the east

by the Leoville Hills . The Witchekan Lake Plain lies almost entirely within

agricultural settlement . It includes the settlements of Amiens, Mildred,

Spiritwood and Bapaume . The Witchekan Indian Reserve No . 117 occupies a small

area bordering the northwest shore of the lake .

Drainage

The plain is mainly an internally drained basin centering on Witchekan

Lake ; the level of this lake is controlled by a shallow overflow outlet at approx-

imately 1,900 feet . This outlet allows drainage northward to the main valley

of the Big River which forms the northern boundary of the area . The Big River

Valley forms the natural boundary between the Witchekan and Chitek Lake Plains .

Soils

The parent materials are dominantly glacial till with local glacio-

fluvial, glacio-alluvial and glacio-lacustrine deposits . Much of the marginal

lake area shows evidence of modification by surface water .

The soils are described in Soil Survey Report No . 13, and are shown on

the accompanying Big River Map Sheet .

In general, this plain forms a local

zone of dominantly Dark Gray Chernozemic soils and Humic Gleysol soils with

significant mixtures of Dark Gray and local Gray Wooded soils occurring as an

island within the main zone of dominant Gray Wooded soils . It is likely that the

characteristics of these soils have developed under grass and tree encroachment

of former meadow areas during the progressive drainage of the Witchekan Lake Basin .

Soil Associations developed on till and lake modified till deposits

include Whitewood, Pelly and Paddockwood, with local areas of Waitville.

Whitesand and Glenbush Associations are found on the coarse textured fluvial

deposits .

Shellbrook soils occur on the finer textured sandy alluvial areas .

A fairly extensive area of Kamsack and Weirdale clay loams occurs on silty

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lacustrine deposits, on the east side of Witchekan Lake . These are probably

the most productive soils of the area .

Fairly extensive areas of Peaty Humic

Gleysol (peaty meadows) occur in the western portion of the area and also

in complexes with other Associations throughout the area .

Agricultural Evaluation

The area is fairly well developed agriculturally and most of the

moderately to well drained medium textured soils are rated fair to good in

productivity capability . Coarser textured soils are not as productive .

Local conditions of poor drainage, which occur in all associations, are also

a handicap to productivity .

A relatively short growing season and the incidence of frost damage

are considered as moderately severe limitations to the productivity of the

area .

E7 .13 Chitek Lake Plain

This area occupies the basin of the Chitek River from Edward Lake to

Chitek Lake (1,830 feet), and into Meadow Lake (1,650 feet) . It is drained

by the Chitek River. The agriculturally developed lands in this area extend

west from the forest boundary to Meadow Lake, and south from the forest

boundary at Chitek Lake. The soils in the settled area are described and

rated in Soil Survey Report No . 13 . They are delineated on the Meadow Lake

and Big River Map Sheets .

Soils

The soils in the west portion which occur on the Meadow Lake Map Sheet

are dominantly the Pine Association, being Gray Wooded and Podzo-regosolic

soils on sandy alluvial materials which have been reworked by wind . A large

area of Organic soils occurs just east of Meadow Lake . The soils on the Big

River Sheet are dominantly till with some local lacustrine deposits . On the

till the Whitewood, a Dark Gray Wooded soil, and the Waitville, a Gray

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Wooded soil occur. The Weirdale, a Calcareous Wooded soil, and the Kamsack,

a Dark Gray Wooded soil, occur on lacustrine deposits .

In the forest reserve the soils are essentially similar ; except north

of Chitek where there is a dominance of coarse alluvial deposits and outwash

materials . These sandy materials become finer textured nearer to Meadow Lake

giving rise to the aforementioned Pine Association . Local Organic soils aiso

occur in the forest reserve .

Resource Evaluation

This is an area of limited agricultural or forest potential due to

coarse texture, low fertility and rough topography. Some recreational

potential exists in the vicinity of Chitek Lake .

E7 .14 Big River Plain

Soils

The dominant portion of this plain is in the settled area and includes

the Big River Indian Reserve No . 118 . The soils in this area are delineated

on the Big River Map Sheet and soil descriptions may be found in Soil Survey

Report No. 13 . The dominant soils are the Waitville Association, a Gray

Wooded on till and the Whitewood, a Dark Gray Wooded . There are also extensive

areas of glacio-fluvial deposits on which the . Bodmin and Glenbush Associations

occur . The former is a Gray Wooded soil, the latter Dark Gray Wooded soils .

The soils in the forest reserve are comparable to those already mentioned .

There are also areas in the forest of mixed Gray Wooded and Organic soils .

The topography is morainic .

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural potential is fair on the heavier textured soils and

poor on the outwash soils . Productivity for forestry is considered as fair

on coarse textured and fair to good on the glacial till soils .

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E7 .15 Delaronde Plain

109

Soils

This plain lies between Cowan Lake and Delaronde Lake (1,620 feet),

and extends southeast out of the forest reserve to the top of Township 54,

Range 7, west of the 3rd . The soils in the settled area are dominantly

Waitville Association which is a Gray Wooded soil on glacial till . The

forested area has similar soils plus islands of Organic soils .

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural potential is fair . Stones are numerous and fertility

is comparatively low.

Forest productivity is fair to good on the Gray Wooded soils, but only

fair on the Organic soils .

E7 .16 Sled Lake Plain

Soils

This is an undulating glacial till plain south of Sled Lake . It

consists mainly of Gray Wooded soils with local areas of Organic soils

occurring . The Gray Wooded till soils are relatively heavy textured,

probably due to some modification by local laking . These Gray Wooded soils

are generally well developed with thick A horizons and strongly structured

B horizons . They are similar to those in the Loon River Association on the

Green Lake Plain .

Soil Evaluation

The soils are considered as fair to poor for agricultural productivity

with adverse structure being the chief limiting factor. They are fair to good

for forest productivity, while the Organic soils in the area are only fair.

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E7 .17 Green Lake Plain

Soils

This area lies adjacent to Green Lake and extends southeastward to

Cowan Lake . It is bordered on the north by the Cowan River . The soils in'the

southern portion are on lake marginal material . They are comparable to the

Loon River Association, which is a Gray Wooded soil on glacial till ; and to the

Dorin tosh Association, which is a Gray Wooded soil on silty lacustrine deposits .

The remainder of the area to the north is composed of soils similar to Sylvania

Association . These are a Gray Wooded soil developed on sandy glacial lake . and

alluvial deposits . A large area of treed muskeg also occurs in the northern

portion of this plain . Detailed descriptions of these soils and their extent

may be found in "Preliminary Soil Survey of the Green Lake Settlement",

Saskatchewan Soil Survey, 1951 .

Soil Evaluation

The soils have a fair to good agricultural potential with the use of

fertilizers containing sulphur and good management for tilth maintenance and

the incorporation of organic matter .

A program of agricultural development in this area was undertaken, in

1940, by the provincial government to assist in stabilizing a living for the

local Metis population . This program has had a modest success .

Forestry productivity is fair to good on the Gray Wooded till soils,

fair on the coarser textured Sylvania soils and poor to fair on the Organic

deposits .

E7 .18 Dore Lake Plain

This plain lies east of the Beaver River and parallels it, being

bordered on the east by Dore Lake (1,506 feet), and Lac La Plonge (1,476 feet),

thence northwest along the Beaver River to Ile-a-la-Crosse (1,380 feet) . The area

northward, to almost the top of Dore Lake, is a till plain, and from here to its

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northern limit an outwash plain, Gray Wooded and Bisequa profiles occur . There

are also extensive areas of Organic soils of varying thickness . The forest

potential is fair to good on the till soils, fair on the sandy outwash soils,

and poor to fair in the Organic soil areas .

E7 .19 La Plonge Plain

This area is bordered on the west by the Ile-a-la-Crosse Plain and runs

roughly east and north to the Churchill River Plain .

Soils

The area is dominated by Gray Wooded and Podzolic soils on medium and

coarse textured glacio-fluvial deposits similar to the Bodmin and Smeaton

Associations described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 . In the southern portion

and near Lac La Plonge there are large areas of treed muskeg with smaller

areas occurring throughout the plain .

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural potential is poor due to low fertility and the coarse

nature of the deposits . Forestry potential is fair to good on the Gray Wooded

till soils, fair on the coarse textured soils, and poor to fair on the Organic

soils of the muskeg areas .

E8 Methy Portage Plain

Location

This plain forms an arc around the Methy River Plain .

Its southeast

border terminates at Churchill Lake . Its eastern and northern borders are the

Churchill River and the valley of the Clearwater River respectively . Its

western border is that of Saskatchewan and Alberta and finally its southwest

border is the Grizzly Bear Hills .

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Climate

The Methy Portage Plain has a mean January temperature ranging from -4

to -60 F, a mean July temperature of 62 to 630 F, and a mean annual between 28

and 300 F. The growing season lasts from 148 to 160 days, commencing between

April 30 and May 5 and ending between October 1 and 6. The .frost period,

however, is only some 70 to 80 days . The annual precipitation is between 16

and 20 inches .

Subsections

The Plain has been d-vided into two subsections . The one to the west

of the Methy River Plain is referred to as the Garson River Plain, and that to

the east as the Clearwater-Churchill Plain .

E8 .1 Garson River Plain

This area represents the plain west from Lac La Loche to the Alberta-

Saskatchewan border . It is largely a coarse glacial till and outwash plain

of Gray Wooded and Podzolic soils similar to the Bodmin Association described

in Soil Survey Report No . 13 . There is one large treed muskeg along the 4th

Meridian . Local smaller muskegs occur throughout the plain . The growth

potential is low because of lack of organic matter, acidity, coarse textured

soils and low fertility . The forest potential poor to fair .

E8 .2 Clearwater-Churchill Plain

This Plain runs southeast from roughly the Saskatchewan-Alberta border

down the east side of Methy Lake to Churchill Lake . The northern boundary is

along the edge of the rock outcrops of the Churchill River Plain to the Clearwater

River. The area is dominantly an outwash plain of coarse sands and gravels .

The soils are mainly Gray Wooded and Podzolic . There are numerous treed muskegs

and bogs of Organic soils . The forestry potential is limited by the present

inaccessibility, but may be considered as fair on the Podzolic soils and poor to

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fair in muskeg areas . From an agricultural viewpoint the area is non-arable

due to coarse textures, stoniness, low fertility and unfavourable topography .

E10 Porcupine Hills Upland

Location

This Upland is bordered on the east by the Saskatchewan-Manitoba border .

On the south, the Swan River Lowland and Assiniboine River Plain form its

borders . The western border is the Nut Lake and Naicam Plains and its northern

border is the Upper Red Deer Plain and the Armit River Plain .

Climate

The Porcupine Hills Upland has a mean January temperature between -2

and -41 F, a mean July temperature between 60 to 621 F, and a mean annual

temperature between 30 and 321 F . The growing season starts between April 30

and May 5, ends between October 6 and 11 lasting between 154 and 165 days .

The last spring frost could occur even after June 20 and the first fall frost

around August 10 . The frost-free period is between 70 and 80 days . The average

precipitation is 13 to 20 inches of which 11 to 13 inches fall between May and

September .

Vegetation

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is,

as the name impiies, a mixture in varying proportions of Aspen (Populus

tremuloides) and Balsam Poplar (P . balsamifera), White Birch (Betula papyrifera)

White Spruce (Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir, the last two species especially

prominent in old stands . The cover type of greatest areal extent is the Aspen,

a result of the ability of this species to regenerate readily following

disturbance .

In addition to its usual dominance on sandy areas, Jack Pine

(Pinus banksiana) enters into the forest composition on the drier till soils,

and mixes with Black Spruce (Picea mariana) on the plateau-like tops of the

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higher hills . Lower positions and the upper water-catchment areas develop Black

Spruce and Tamarack (Larix laricina) muskeg in which, however, the accumulation

of peat is not deep . There is a minor occurrence of White Elm (Ulmus americana),

Green Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica var. subintegerrima), and Manitoba Maple

(Acer negundo var. interius) particularly below the escarpment and along the

banks of streams and creeks .

Resource Evaluation

the province .

Subdivisions

The Porcupine and Pasquia Hills Uplands represent one of the best

commercial forestry areas in the province . Thry also provide recreational

areas and wildlife habitat . Agricultural pursuits have no place on these

uplands and would only lead to the deterioration of a beautiful region in

The Porcupine Hills Upland is subdivided into five sections representing

the top, the escarpments and lower slope portions of the Upland .

E10 .1 Porcupine Mountain

This Upland rises over 1,700 feet above the surrounding country ; the

rough terrain is mainly l~.mited to side slopes The tops are plateau-like with

a few sharply defined ridges or summits .

Soils

The soils are mainly Gray Wooded, Dark Gray Wooded and Organic . They

are developed on thin glacial deposits throughout the uplands with little

subsequent sorting . Localized outwash deposits occur throughout the areas of

dominantly glacial till and there are also local areas of lacustrine clay

deposits over the glacial till . There are some bedrock exposures, mainly

Upper Cretaceous Shales of Montana Group .

The soils are similar to the Waitville and Whitewood Associations

described in Soils Report No . 13 .

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Resource Evaluation

This is a good forestry area and is described in a pamphlet entitled

"Forest Resources of the Pasquia-Porcupine Area of Saskatchewan" by J .M . Atkinson

and M .N . Pelly, Department of Natural Resources, Forest Inventory Series Report

No . 1, Revised Edition 1954 .

E10 .2 Porcupine Escarpment

This area lies mainly within the boundaries of the provincial forest

except for an area in the southwest .

Soils

In the settled area the soils are mainly Dark Gray Chernozemic, Dark

Gray and Gray Wooded of the Pelly, Waitville, Kamsack and Etomami Associations

respectively .

The portions within the Forest Reserve are dominantly Gray Wooded on

moderately calcareous medium to moderately fine textured glacial deposits,

with a significant inclusion of Organic peat soils .

Resource Evaluation

This area supports a good forest growth of commercial value . Controlled

logging will ensure that erosion is held in check on the escarpment slopes .

E10 .3 Piwei Hills

All of this area is in Forest Reserve except for the southern portion,

Soils

The soils are dominantly the Waitville Association on rolling morainic

topography. Waitville is a Gray Wooded soil on glacial till . This area appears

on the northeast sheet of Soils Report No . 12 and a more detailed soil description

can be found in that report .

Resource Evaluation

The area is utilized as commercial forest .

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El0 .4 Nut Mountain

This area is nearly all in the settled area, a small portion in the

north is in the Forest Reserve .

Soils

The soils are mainly Gray Wooded developed on rolling glacial till

moraines . The soils are similar to the Waitville Association described in No .

12 Soils Report and are delineated on the accompanying northeast map sheet .

Agricultural Evaluation

The agricultural potential is fair ; stones are numerous, fertility

low and topography rough .

E10 .5

Greenwater Hills

The southern portion of this area is in the settled area, the northern

portion is in Forest Reserve .

Soils

The soils are the Waitville and Kelvington Associations . The Waitville

is a Gray Wooded soil developed on till, while the Kelvington is a Gray Wooded

developed on heavy clay deposits . These soils are delineated on the northeast

sheet and described in Soils Report No . 12 .

Resource Evaluation

The area supports commercial timber in the northern area which is

inside the Porcupine provincial forest . Happily, however, its western portion,

or Township 41, Range 11, has been set aside as Greenwater Lake Provincial

Park .

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Ell Pasquia Hills Upland

Location

The Pasquia Hills are north of the Porcupine Hills .

They are separated

by portions of the Manitoba and Saskatchewan Lowlands which form a trench between

them .

The Pasquia and Porcupine Hills rise to nearly the same elevation . The

highest elevation in the former being 2,680 feet and in the latter 2,700 feet ;

Climate

The mean January temperature ranges between -2 and -40 F, the mean

July between 60 and 620 F and the mean annual between 30 and 320 F. The growing

season lasts between 154 and 165 days starting between April 30 and May 5 and

ending between October 6 and 11 . The last spring frost may occur even after

June 20 and the first fall frost may occur as early as August 10 . The frost-

free period may be less than 70 days . The annual precipitation is between 18

and 20 inches of which between 11 and 13 inches fall from May to September .

Vegetation

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is,

as the name implies, a mixture in varying proportions of Aspen (Populus

tremuloides) and Balsam Poplar (P . balsamifera), White Birch (Betula

papyrifera), White Spruce (Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) ;

the last two species especially prominent in old stands . The cover type of

greatest areal extent is the Aspen, a result of the ability of this species

to regenerate readily following disturbance . In addition to its usual dominance

on sandy areas, Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) enters into the forest composition

on the drier till soils, and mixed with Black Spruce (Picea mariana) on the

plateau-like tops .of the higher hills . Lower positions and the upper water

catchment areas develop Black Spruce and Tamarack (Larix laricina) muskeg in

which, however, the accumulation of peat is not deep . There is a minor

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occurrence of White Elm (Ulmus americana), Green Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica

var. subintegerrima) and Manitoba Maple (Acer negundo var. interius) particularly

below the escarpment and along the banks of streams and creeks .

Subdivisions

The Pasquia Hills have been divided into two sections representing

firstly the top and secondly the escarpment .

E11 .1 Pasquia Plateau

This area rises from the top of the escarpment at approximately 2,300

feet, and, except for isolated highs that range up to 2,600 feet, is a broad

plateau-like plain . It contains a few lakes and is beautifully treed .

Soils

Gray Wooded soils developed on glacial till are dominant . Such soils

are similar to the Waitville and Whitewood Associations . Degraded soils

developed on heavier textured shale modified till also occur as do shallow

soils on outcrops of shale bedrock . Locally, pockets of outwash gravel and

sands occur sometimes over the till and sometimes underlying it . Pockets of

various textured lacustrine soils also occur. There is evidence to conclude

that the glacial ice sheet passed over both the Pasquia and Porcupine Hills and

such action has resulted in a variety of soil parent materials .

Resource Potential

The Pasquia and Porcupine Uplands represent one of the best forestry

areas in Saskatchewan . Commercial forestry is the best use of these areas as

it not only employs some of the local residents and others, but it protects

the Uplands from the tremendous and devastating erosion that would occur if

such areas were cleared for agriculture.

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Ell .2 Pasquia Escarpment

This area represents the rougher terrain of the side slopes below

the plateau . It has a dissected landscape and carries considerable water

during the spring thaw or after heavy rains giving rise to such streams as

Connell Creek, Overflowing River, Greenbush River, Fir River, etc . The

escarpment is an impressive sight after the flatness of the Saskatchewan Delta .

It rises very quickly from approximately 1,000 to 2,300 feet . If such an area

were denuded of trees the erosion would be devastating .

Soils

The soils are similar to those described on the plateau being Gray

Wooded . For those areas outside the forest reserve the reader is referred

to No . 12 Soils Report and the accompanying northeast map sheet .

E12 Wapawekka Hills Upland

Location

This Upland is bordered on the north by Wapawekka Plain, on the east

by the Mossy River,Plain, and on the west by the Bittern Lake Plain .

It forms

a height of land between the Manitoba-Saskatchewan Lowlands to the east and

the Lac La Ronge Lowlands to the west .

Climate

The mean for January is between -4 and -loo F, for July it is between

60 and 620 F and annually around 29 to 300 F. The growing season lasts

between 148 and 160 days, starting between April 30 and May 5 and ending

between October 1 and 6 . The frost-free period may be less than 70 and not

over 80 days . The last spring frost may occur after June 20 and the first

fall frost before August 20 . There are between 18 and 20 inches of annual

precipitation of which 11 inches fall between May and September.

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Vegetation

The area is classified as part of the Mixed Wood Section .

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is, as

the name implies, a mixture in varying proportions of Aspen (Populus tremuloides)

and Balsam Poplar (P . balsamifera), White Birch (Betula papyrifera), White

Spruce (Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) ; the last two species

especially prominent in old stands . The cover type of greatest areal extent

is the Aspen, a result of the ability of this species to regenerate readily

following disturbance. In addition to its usual dominance on sandy areas,

Jack Pine (PinUs banksiana) enters into the forest composition on the drier

till soils, and mixes with Black Spruce (Picea mariana) on the plateau-like

tops of the higher hills . Lower positions and the upper water-catchment areas

develop Black Spruce and Tamarack (Larix laricina) muskeg in which, however,

the accumulation of peat is not deep . A significant portion of the Wapawekka

Hills Upland has merchantable timber .

Subdivisions

There are six subsections delineated within the boundary of the Wapawekka

Uplands . They represent various uplands, their escarpments and valleys .

E12 .1 Wapawekka Plateau

The symbols E12 .1 were omitted from this area which lies above the

Bear and Cub Escarpment south of Wapawekka Lake . It appears on a map as a

blue-grey colored area which contains about a dozen small olive-green colored

areas .

The plateau is approximately 2,500 feet in elevation . It has been

glaciated and these glacial till deposits are dominant . Local areas of

lacustrine and outwash deposits also occur as do shale bedrock exposures .

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Soils

The soils in the area are dominantly Dark Gray Wooded and Gray Wooded .

Local areas of organic soils occur as islands in the depressions throughout

the plateau .

E12 .2 Cub Hills

This area lies south of the Wapawekka Plateau . It consists of dominantly

Gray Wooded soils on coarser textured tills . The soils are like the Smeaton

Complex described .in Soils Report No . 13 . Local areas of Organic soils also

occur. The bedrock geology is similar to that of the Wapawekka Plateau .

E12 .3 Bear and Cub Escarpment

Landform

This area represents the dissected side of the Wapawekka Plateau and

the Cub Hills from the top of the hills to the lowlands below.

Soils

The area is mainly Gray Wooded and Podzol soils on mixed areas of

medium and coarse textured glacial outwash deposits, similar to the Glenbush,

Bodmin and Sylvania and Smeaton Associations, described in Soils Report No .

13 . Local areas of Organic soils also occur . The forestry would no doubt be

limited to those portions which were not too steep or eroded .

E12 .4 Whiteswan Upland

Landform

A moderately to strongly rolling and hilly morainic plain with a

general elevation of from 1,700 to 2,000 feet above sea level . It forms the

broad divide between the Churchill and Saskatchewan drainage systems .

Soils

Gray Wooded, medium to coarse textured soils occur on moderately

calcareous stony glacial till and sandy gravelly outwash deposits . Frequent

deep muskegs occur in local depressions, lower flats and river valleys . The

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Upland soils may be compared to the more stony medium textured Waitville and

Bodmin Associations described in Soils Report No . 13 . The area is potentially

poor because of adverse topography, stony gravelly conditions and the presence

of numerous muskegs .

E12.5 Narrow Hills

The Narrow Hills bisected the Nipawin Provincial Park in a southeast

to northwest direction . They are as tksxxx their name implies esker-like in

appearance . They are composed mainly of gravelly sand outwash .

Soils

The soils are dominantly Gray Wooded with local areas of Organic types .

The area iitxxx is non-arable due to the unfavorable topography, and the low

productivity of the coarse textured Podzolic soils .

E12 .6 N.ipekamew Valley

This area is an elongated glacial valley and meltwater channel which

forms the boundary between the Cub Hills and the Whiteswan Upland . It extends

southeast from the Wapawekka Plain towards the Torch River Plain .

Soils .

Gray Wooded loam, Gray Wooded sands and local mossy peat soils occur

on glacial till and gravelly outwash deposits. The area has a low productivity

rating because of steep sloping topography and excessive drainage .

E17 Waskesiu Hills Upland

The Waskesiu Upland is bordered on the east by the Bittern Lake RK

Plain, on the west by portions of the Beaver River Plain, on the north by

portions of the Lac La Ronge Plain .

Its southern border almost coincides

with that of the Prince Albert National Park.

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Climate

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The mean January temperature ranges between-2 and -60 F, the mean

July between 60 and 620 F and the mean annual between 30 and 310 F . The

growing season commences between April 30 and May 5 and ends between October

1 and 6, lasting from 148 to 160 days . The last spring frost could occur

after June 20 and the first fall frost before August 20 . Thus, there are

often less than 70 and rarely more than 80 frost-free days . The annual

precipitation is between 16 and 20 inches of which 11 to 13 inches fall

between May and September .

Vegetation

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is,

as the name implies, a mixture in varying proportions of Aspen (Populus

tremuloides) and Balsam Poplar (Populus balsamifera), white Birch (Betula

papyrifera), White Spruce (Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) ;

the last two species especially prominent in old stands . The cover type of

greatest areal extent is the Aspen, a result of the ability of this species

to regenerate readily following disturbance . In addition to its usual dominance

on sandy areas, Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) enters into the forest composition

on the drier ti-11-soils, and mixes with Black Spruce (Picea mariana) on the

plateau-like tops of the higher hills . Lower positions and the upper water-

catchment areas develop Black Spruce and Tamarack (Larix laricina) muskeg in

which, however, the accumulation of peat is not deep .

Subdivision

The Waskesiu Hills Upland has been divided into four subsections .

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E17 .1 Emma Lake Upland

This area is entirely within the Forest Reserve except for those

portions in the south . The landform is mainly rolling moraine .

Soils

The soils are similar to the Waitville and Bodmin Associations described

in Soils Report No . 13 . They are developed on glacial till and glacial outwash

deposits respectively . Local areas of Organic soils also occur.

Resource Evaluation

The potential for agricultural development is limited by rolling

topography and Organic soils in poorly drained depressions . The capability

for forestry production is fair to good on the Upland Gray Wooded soils but

poor to fair on muskeg (Organic soil) sites . The recreational potential has

been well developed in the vicinity of Emma and Christopher Lakes .

E17 .2 Waskesiu Hills

This area takes in nearly all the Prince Albert National Park, a

lovely resort area, maintained by,the federal government . The reserve portion

of this area is rolling morainic topography ranging from 1,700 to 2,500 feet .

The area is dominantly Dark Gray Wooded and Gray Wooded soils on till and

outwash ; similar to those of the Whitewood, Waitville, Pelly, Bodmin and

Glenbush Associations described in Soils Report No . 13 .

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural potential is low due to rough topography, and the

presence of numerous poorly drained depressions of Organic soils . The

forestry potential is good throughout most of the area, but only fair to good

in the southern portion . The recreational potential is good and has been well

developed in the vicinity of Waskesiu Lake .

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E17 .3 Thunder Hills

These Hills lie north of the Waskesiu Hills .

They occur as rolling

moraine which rises to 2,200 feet in elevation and are therefore lower than

the Waskesiu Hills .

Soils

The soils are mainly Gray Wooded types developed on till and outwash,

There are more Gray Wooded outwash soils in this area than in E17 .2 . These

soils would be similar to the Bodmin Soils described in Soil Survey Report

No . 13 . Local areas of muskeg (Organic soils) occur.

Resource Evaluation

The area is classed as non-arable because of rough topography, stones

and muskeg . The forestry potential is good on medium textured till soils,

fait on outwash soils, and poor to fair in the muskeg areas .

E17 .4 Dore Hills

This area of rolling moraine lies between Delaronde Lake and the

Thunder-Waskesiu Hills and runs north between Dore and Smoothstone Lake .

Soils

The soils consist of Gray Wooded types developed on till and glacio-

fluvial materials . These latter deposits are dominant around Clarke Lake

and north of Dore . Local areas of organic soils occur throughout the whole

area . The soils would be similar to the Waitville, Bodmin and Pine Associations

described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered non-arable because of stones, low fertility

and adverse topography . The forestry potential is good on medium textured

soils ; fair to good on coarse glacio-fluvial textured deposits, and poor

to fair in the muskeg areas .

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F Alberta High Plains

The Alberta High Plains is a Region within the Great Plains Province

of the Interior Plains of North America . In Saskatchewan they form the third

prairie steppe and continue westward to the foothills of the Rockies . Nearly

all of this area is over 2,000 feet above sea level . It is separated from

the second prairie steppe whose elevation, except for isolated hills, averages

between 1,000 and 2,000 feet by the Missouri Coteau in the southern portion

of the province . It is easy to t follow $kixx the Coteau in the southern part

of the province where it is a prominent eastward-facing ridge or low escarpment

which enters the Province south of Weyburn, follows a general north-westerly

direction to a point east of Biggar, and then runs north-easterly to enter the

present surveyed area about 25 miles west of Shellbrook . Within this area,

the eastward-facing slope of the Coteau runs northward to Hailsham and Timberlost,

and thence north-westerly through the Big River and Meadow Lake Forest Reserves

to a point about 10 miles south of Meadow Lake . Beyond this point it is

difficult to determine the location of the Coteau escarpment . The ridge here

turns westward, crossing the Meadow Lake and KXXRK Bronson Forest Reserves

and entering Alberta at about Township 58 . To the north lies the lower plain

occupied by the Beaver and Waterhen Rivers ; north of the Waterhen is another

rough upland area . It is possible that the original escarpment between the

Meadow Lake upland and the upland just west of Flotten Lake has been eroded

by the Beaver River. On the other hand, the westward-trending ridge south

of Meadow Lake may also be regarded as the edge of the Coteau, which swings

back eastward near Cold Lake to form a re-entrant north of the Waterhen River.

It may be noted here that the upland south of Meadow Lake forms the divide

between the Saskatchewan and Churchill River basins .

The Coteau marks a general change of elevation in the Great Plains .

West of the Coteau the general elevation is higher than to the east . In the

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- 127

present surveyed area the eastern edge of the Coteau and the associated upland

to the west range in elevation from 2,000 feet to 2,500 feet above sea level .

The highest elevations occur near the eastern edge ranging from 2,400 feet

to 2,500 feet between Meeting Lake and Meadow Lake . East of the Coteau the

range from 1,900 feet to below 1,000 feet . It is considered that

in elevation represented by the Coteau Escarpment is a reflection

existing prior to glaciation . The surface of the Coteau

is chiefly rolling to hilly, and consists

undrained depressions (lakes,

ponds, meadows and bogs) . The topography is that described by the geologist

as knob and kettle, and is typical of glacial morainic deposits . Some areas,

notably at Glaslyn and north-west of St . Walburg, are characterized by

undulating topography .

F6 Thickwood Hills Upland

Location

The Thickwood Hills Upland is arced around its southern portion by

the Saskatchewan River Plains and in the north by Beaver River Plain and the

Mostoos Hills Upland .

Land fo rm

It is basically a rolling morainic plain composed of varying amounts

of gently to strongly rolling topography . It also contains glacio-fluvial

plains and glacial till plains . The elevation throughout varies from 1,800

to 2,500 feet .

elevations

the change

of bedrock conditions

(including the upland to the west)

of wooded ridges and slopes interspersed with

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Climate

128 -

The mean January temperature ranges from 0 to -40 F, the mean July from

61 to 620 F, and the mean annual 31 to 321 F . The growing season starts between

April 25 and May 5 and ends between October I and 11, thus lasting between 148

and 169 days . The frost- .free period is often less than 70 days . Frost can

occur as late as June 20 and as early as August 10 . The mean annual

precipitation ranges between 14 and 16 inches of which 10 to 12 inches fall

between May and September.

Soils

The soils are mainly Gray Wooded types developed on medium to moderately

fine textured glacial till . Gray Wooded and Podzolic soils also occur on

medium to coarse textured glacial till . There are also local areas of Organic

soils .

Vegetation

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is,

as the name implies, a mixture in varying proportions of Aspen (Populus

tremuloides) and Balsam Poplar (Populus balsamifera), White Birch (Betula

papyrifera), White Spruce (Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) ;

the last two species especially prominent in old stands . The cover type of

greatest areal extent is the Aspen, a result of the ability of this species

to regenerate readily following disturbance . In addition to its usual

dominance on sandy areas, Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) enters into the forest

composition on the drier till soils, and mixes with Black Spruce (Picea mariana)

on the plateau-like tops of the higher hills . Lower positions and the upper

water-catchment areas develop Black Spruce and Tamarack (Larix laric.ina)

muskeg in which, however, the accumulation of peat is not deep .

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Resource Evaluation

In the Forest Reserve the productivity is fair to good . The reserve

is considered non-arable for agricultural crops due to adverse topography,

numerous stones and soils of low fertility .

Subdivisions

The Thickwood Hills Upland is subdivided in five subsections as follows .

F6 .1 Thickwood Hills

This area, is in the settled area . Its topography ranges from undulating

till plains to rolling moraines . The soils . are mainly Dark Gray Wooded, Gray

Wooded and Dark Gray Chernozemics similar to the Waitville and Whitewood

Associations . Detailed descriptions of the soils and their areal extent are

contained in the Soil Survey Reports Nos . 12 and 13 .

F6 .2 Leoville Hills

This area occurs as an island separated from the other subsections

in the Thickwood Hills Upland . It is surrounded by various subsections of

the Mostoos Hills Upland . It is a gently to moderately rolling morainic area

composed of Gray Wooded soils developed on till . The soils are similar to

the Waitville Association described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 .

F6 .3 Bronson-Meadow Lake Hills

The portions of this area in the settled area are delineated on the

Big River, Fort Pitt and Meadow Lake sheets of Soil Survey Report No . 13 .

Descriptions of these Associations are in the same report . The area includes

the Meadow Lake and Bronson Forest Reserves . The Meadow Lake reserve is a

rolling morainic plain, with Gray Wooded soils developed on glacial till and

outwash, similar to the Waitville and Bodmin Associations . There are also

areas of muskeg and mixed areas of Organic and Gray Wooded soils . The Bronson

reserve is rougher having hilly topography . Gray Wooded and Podzolic soils,

muskeg and peaty meadows occur on glacial till and outwash . Some Loon River

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130

soils also occur . The Bronson reserve has not been as well maintained as the

Meadow Lake . Both areas have potential productivity for forestry, ranging

from fair to poor, because of low fertility and adverse topography .

F6 .4 Beaver Uplands

Although this area is outside the present Forest Reserve, agricultural

development has been slow . It consists of undulating till plains and rolling

moraines . The soils are mainly Gray Wooded, developed on relatively low lime

glacial till . There are also Gray . Wooded soils on outwash and large muskeg

areas in the northwest corner. The glacial till soils are similar to the

Loon River Association and the outwash soils are similar to Bodmin . Both

these Associations are described in detail in Soil Survey Report No . 13 .

The agricultural potential is poor, mainly due to adverse rolling

topography and stones . Some limited cultivation and ranching has been

developed in this area . Forest productivity is considered fair .

F6 .5 Cold Lake Hills

This area lies to the northeast of F6 .4, running east from the Alberta-

Saskatchewan border to Range 25, W3rd and north to Cold Lake . The south or

settled portion is delineated on the Meadow Lake Sheet of Soil Survey Report

No . 13 . The Loon River, Bodmin, and Makwa Associations, representing Dark

Gray Wooded, Gray Wooded and Podzolic soils developed on glacial till and

outwash occur extensively in this area . Further details on these soils may

be found in Soil Survey Report No . 13 . The northern portion of the area

enters the Waterhen Provincial Forest and the soils are similar to those

already mentioned .

The agricultural potential is considered poor because of adverse

topography .

The forest potential is considered as fair.

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F7 Mostoos Hills Upland

Location

This area lies north of the Waterhen River which separates it from

the Thickwood Hills Upland to the south . It rises from the Beaver River

Plain and the Lac La Ronge Lowland westward into Alberta .

Landforms

The area is basically a rolling morainic plain which contains gently

to strongly rolling topography, a thinly glaciated plateau and eroded escarprrrents .

Soils

The soils consist mainly o£ Gray Wooded and Podzol types developed on

medium and coarse textured glacial deposits . Organic soils of varying

thicknesses also occur throughout the area .

Climate

The mean January temperature varies between -4 and -60 F, the mean

July between 60 and 620 F, and the mean annual temperature between 29 and 320

F . The growing season is over 130 days but the frost-free period is short

often being just over 60 days . The mean annual precipitation varies from 18

to 24 inches, of which between 10 and 16 inches fall from May to September.

Vegetation

The characteristic forest association of the well-drained uplands is

a mixture in varying proportions of Aspen (Populus tremuloides) and Balsam

Poplar (Populus balsamifera), White Birch (Betula papyrifera), White Spruce

(Picea glauca) and Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) ; the last two species especially

prominent in old stands . The cover type of greatest areal extent is the Aspen,

a result of the ability of this species to regenerate readily following disturbance

In addition to its usual dominance on sandy areas, Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana)

enters into the forest composition on the drier till soils, and mixes with

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Black Spruce (Picea mariana) on the plateau-like tops of the higher hills .

Lower positions and the upper water-catchment areas develop Black Spruce and

Tamarack (Larix laricina) muskeg in which, however, the accumulation of peat

is not deep .

Resource Evaluation

The area is considered non-arable for agriculture due to soils of low

fertility, dissected landscapes and stones . The forest potential is considered

to be fair to good .

Subdivisions

The Mostoos Hills Upland has been divided in five subsections as

follows .

F7 .1 Mostoos Upland

This area is located in an arc from the Alberta-Saskatchewan border

east and around Primrose Lake and west back to the border . The upland rises

to 2,500 feet and is gently to strongly rolling .

Soils

The soils are developed on medium to moderately fine textured till,

fine sandy and coarse outwash materials Most of the parent materials are

low in lime carbonate content . Bedrock exposures of the Upper Cretaceous

(Montana Group, Lea Park Formation) shales and sandy shales also occur . Large

areas of muskegs and Organic and Gray Wooded mixtures are also present . The

low agricultural productive potential is a result of low fertility, adverse

topography, and coarse textured soils .

Resource Evaluation

A large portion of this area has been taken over by the federal

government as a weapon testing range and is utilized in conjunction with the

Air Force activities at Cold Lake .

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The forest productivity potential is good to fair on the glacial till

soils, fair on coarse textured soils and poor to fair in the muskeg areas .

About one-third of the area is thought to have some commercial value :

F7.2 Mostoos Escarpment

This escarpment forms an are on the south and east side of the upland

and cuts into the Dillon River Upland in the north . This escarpment rises

to the west of the Lac Ile-a-la-Crosse Lowland .

The topography is rough and dissected .

Drainage is to the Waterhen in the south and to Keeley and Canoe Lakes

in the east . There is quite a system of intermittent streams coming down off

the escarpment . The drainage in the north is to the Dillon River which forms

the northern boundary .

Soils

The soils in the south and east are mainly Gray Wooded on till similar

to the Waitville described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 . To the north the

soils are coarser being Gray Wooded and Podzols on outwash materials . The

outwash soils are similar to the Bodmin and Pine Associations described in

Soil Survey Report No . 13 0

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural productivity potential is low due to low fertility,

coarse textured soils and adverse topography . The forestry potential is fair

to good on the till soils, fair on outwash and poor on the Organic soils .

F7 .3 Primrose Lake Plain

This area lies between Primrose Lake and the Mostoos Upland . Much

of the area lies within the Cold Lake Weapon Range .

Soils

It is dominantly an area of muskeg and Organic soils over coarse sandy

outwash materials . The better drained areas are Gray Wooded soils similar to

the Bodmin Association described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 .

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Resource Evaluation

The agricultural productivity potential is low due to and rained muskeg

soils and coarse textured upland soils . The forestry potential is mainly fair

to poor .

F7 .4 Dillon River Upland

This area is south of the Dillon River and west of the Mostoos Upland

and its escarpment, to the fourth Meridian .

Soils

The soils are dominantly Gray Wooded and Podzol soils on low lime

glacial till ; some local muskeg or Organic soils occur.

Resource Evaluation

The potential for agriculture is poor due to short cool seasons,

frost hazard, and low fertility status . The forestry potential is fair on

tills and poor to fair on the muskeg soils .

F7.5 Grizzly Bear Hills

This area, lying north of the Dillon River, constitutes the high land

between the Ile-a-la-Crosse Plain and the Garson River Plain .

It is a rolling

hilly area of Podzolic soils on glacial till .

Productivity potential for agriculture is considered low due to low

fertility and adverse topography . The forestry productivity potential is fair .

F8 Fire Bag Hills Upland

This area is north of the Clearwater River, east of the fourth Meridian

and south of the Churchill River Plains . The landscape is dominantly a gently

to strongly rolling morainic plain whose elevation ranges from 1,500 to 2,000

feet .

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Climate

The mean temperature for January is between -6 and -loo F, for July

between 61 and 620 F, and annually between 28 and 290 F . The frost-free period

is often less than 60 days and never over 70 . The annual precipitation is

between 16 and 18 inches, of which 10 or 11 inches fall between May and

September.

Soils

The bedrock is lower Cretaceous sandstone over Paleozoic limestone .

The soils therefore are sandy tills and outwash similar to the Smeaton and

Bodmin Associations described in Soil Survey Report No . 13 . Local areas of

Organic soils also overlie these coarse textured deposits .

Vegetation

Black Spruce (Picea mariana) is the predominant tree, forming stands

on the thin soils of the uplands as well as on the poorly drained lowlands,

and associated on these two positions with Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) and

Tamarack (Larix laricina) . Frequent fires have favoured the spread of Jack

Pine and are probably responsible also for the general, though scattered,

representation of White Birch (Betula papyrifera) over the majority of sites .

In river valleys, around some of the lakes, and on south-facing slopes, where

more favourable conditions of soil and local climate prevail, White Spruce

(Picea glauca), ' Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea), Aspen (Populus tremuloides) and

Balsam Poplar (Populus balsamifera) form mixed stands of good growth .

Resource Evaluation

The agricultural productivity potential is low due to coarse soils

and low fertility . The forestry potential is fair on upland coarse textured

soils .

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Northern Plains Province

G Athabasca River Lowlands

G1 Clearwater River Plains

The Clearwater River Plains is a Section of the Athabasca River Lowlands

which is a Region within the Northern Plains Province of the Interior Plains

of North America .

Climate

The mean temperature for January ranges from -6 to -loo F, for July

between 62 and 630 F and annually between 28 and 300 F . The growing season

is adequate but the frost-free period is often less than 60 days . The annual

precipitation ranges from 16 to 18 inches of which 10 to 11 inches fall

between May and September.

Vegetation

Black Spruce (Picea mariana) is the predominant tree, forming stands

on the thin soils of the uplands as well as on the poorly drained lowlands,

and associated on these two positions with Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) and

In river valleys,. around some of the lakes and

more favourable conditions of soil and local

(Picea glauca), Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea),

Aspen (Populus tremuloides) and Balsam Poplar (Populus balsamifera) form

mixed stands of good growth .

Subdivisions

The Clearwater River Plains has been divided into two subsections, as

Tamarack (Larix laricina) .

on south-facing slopes, where

climate prevail, White Spruce

follows :

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G1 .1 Clearwater River Valley

This area is part of the eroded valley and the alluvial flat of the

Clearwater River . The valley is from 500 to 1,000 feet deep with dissected

truncated soils on the valley sides . The topography ranges from flat to

strongly rolling . The landscape is mainly that of dissected valley slopes

and river plains and terraces .

Soils(l)

- 137 -

Vegetation, parent material, and drainage conditions, particularly

the last two, are the major factors influencing the types and development of

soils in the Clearwater Valley . The vegetative cover is fairly typical of

that found on the borders of the XX Mixedwood and Northern EXKKX Coniferous

Sections of the Boreal Forest Region . The tree cover, on imperfectly to well

drained sites, varies from mature stands of spruce to mixedwoods of Spruce -

Aspen with more local stands of Jack Pine or mixed Aspen and Birch . Poorly

drained areas are dominated by a marsh-meadow vegetative cover of sedges,

meadow grasses and willows with local stands of mixed Black Spruce and Tamarack.

Under such vegetation one might expect well developed Podzolic, Gleysolic

Meadow, and Organic soil profiles . However, the excessively sandy nature of

the parent materials, and the extreme range and variations in drainage conditions,

have resulted in a dominance of weakly developed Regosolic, Podzolic, and

Gleysolic profiles .

The soils of the steep valley sides have developed largely on incoherent

sandy loams and sands presumably derived by erosion and slumping of sandy till .

and outwash, or from sandy material of Lower Cretaceous origin . These valley

slopes are for the most part excessively drained with numerous eroding slopes

and intermittent water courses . Under these conditions the soils are mainly

Mor Regosols (weakly developed soils under forest cover), with some weakly

(1) Preliminary Soil. Survey of the Clearwater River Valley in North-WesternSaskatchewan . D,F . Acton . Saskatchewan Soil Survey . July 1962.

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developed Podzolic soils found on the more stable slope positions .

The soils of the valley bottomland are mostly developed on loamy sand

and incoherent sand deposits . In a few areas there is a thin overlay of finer

textured, alluvial materials . The river has entrenched itself into a flood

plain, usually less than a mile in width, leaving a series of flat terraces

which rise in elevation as they extend back from the river. These terraces

and bottomlands .receive the accumulated run-off from a much larger area of

excessively drained valley slopes and consequently the soils have developed

under conditions of very poor to imperfect drainage . The lowest terraces near

the river are usually very poorly drained, whereas the higher terraces ax may

exhibit somewhat better drainage conditions . The soils are mostly immature

or weakly developed, varying from fibrous peaty (Organic soils) to peaty

Gleysolic soils developed under meadow vegetation . Local areas of weakly

developed Podzolic, or Mor Regosolic soils occur on the slightly better

drained sites, or on sandy ridges with tree cover.

Resource Evaluation

The potential arability and productivity is low due to adverse

topography on the slopes and flooding in the bottom, some organic meadows

also occur in the bottomlands . Productivity for forestry is fair to good on

the better drained alluvial soils .

G1 .2 Christina River Plain

This subsection is a low lying plain on the Alberta-Saskatchewan border

and lies north and south of the twenty-first baseline . The area is mainly

muskeg and Organic soils over sandy till and outwash .

Potential agricultural productivity is poor due to ,a predominance

of Organic (muskeg) soils .

Forestry potential is considered as poor to

fair.

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Reflections on Agricultural Pursuits in the Northern Provincial Forest Area

The Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology does not regard the present

report as final or even complete . It is only the beginning of further studies

which must be made by Pedologists and workers in other disciplines before

.

intelligent decisions can be made regarding alternative land use in the

Provincial Forest .

Due to the broader generalizations made in this report the authors deem

it necessary to record their reasoning for statements made throughout the text .

1 . The interpretation of the "Source Information" in Appendix I and the

incorporation of such statements as seemed applicable into the report is

entirely that of the authors of this report . If the viewpoints of the

original authors was misconstrued the fault is ours .

II . The authors viewed the physical factors that affect land use as follows :

The more important physical factors affecting land use in a given area

are :

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a) climate and associated biological factors -- vegetation,micro-organisms, etc .

b) land forms -- including geological deposits, topography anddrainage .

c) soils .

Other factors such as accessibility, transportation, markets are also

important but are more logically treated under economic factors .

In the area under discussion, which is roughly the forest region of

Saskatchewan, the most important climatic factors are those relating to length

of growing season . In general, moisture conditions are satisfactory for

vegetative growth but the amount of growth (and for agricultural plants, the

proper maturing or ripening of the crop) is greatly affected by weather

conditions during the growing season .

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- 140 . .

There are . insufficient long-time meteorological records for Northrrn

Saskatchewan, but the available information indicates some important differences

in length of growing season and frost hazard . In general, the Prince Albert

area and the eastern section of the present settled area have a longer growing

season than the northwestern section .

It seems reasonable to assume that the frost hazard increases with higher

latitudes and hence in any consideration of northward extension of agriculture

the climatic factor will become increasingly important . In%this connection it

is important to realize that the favorable growth conditions at a number of far

northern settlements are due to the proximity of large lakes . The long growing

season enjoyed at Ile-a-la-Crosse, for example, is unlikely to extend far

beyond the immediate vicinity of the lake .

The foregoing remarks are intended to emphasize the importance of the

climatic factor in any proposed agricultural development . The same factor

influences the rate of growth and ultimately the type and value of the forest

cover .

The land forms of a given area are particularly important in considering

agriculturalland use . The presence of the ice-scoured Pre-Cambrian Shield with

its bare rock outcrops, undrained lakes and basins, and thin soils, is a

definite barrier to large scale agricultural development . Between the Shield

and the present limits of settlement the nature of the surface geological

deposits is also very important . Excessively sandy, gravelly or stony deposits

are direct handicaps to agricultural land use, irrespective of the type of

soil or topography .

The topography and related drainage conditions are obvious factors in

land use . Extremely rough topography on the one hand and wet undrained lowlands

on the other are unsuitable for arable agriculture . It is true that some lowlands

are potentially suitable for agriculture if drainage can be effected . In

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between these extremes of topography the land surface i s suitable for agri cul tiirnl

use, providing other factors are favorable . There is, however, a great difference

in potential productivity between rolling land and nearly level land . Thus,

soil conditions need to be more favorable as the topography becomes rougher, if

the costs of development are to be justified .

The topography is also partly responsible for local drainage conditions,

local climate, the erosion hazard, rmf relative ease and cost of cultivation,

road development, etc . In any study of potential land use topography is one of

the most important factors to be considered .

The factors already mentioned are also important in assessing the soil

factor, since soils are the product of climate, vegetation, geology, topography,

drainage and time or maturity . The combined effects of these soil-forming

factors are expressed in the soil profile -- which is simply the succession of

natural layers of soil extending from the surface downwards into unaltered

geological material . In addition to its depth, the soil also has length and

breadth -- or in other words it represents an area of the earth's surface . It

is the task of the soils man to identify different soil profiles, to describe

their characteristics and to show their areal extent on a map . He is also expected,

in most instances, to make some arrangement or grouping of the soils according

to known or predicted uses .

For the area under discussion, we may say that most of the upland soils

have been influenced by a forest vegetative cover. Under the prevailing ROM climate

this type of vegetation favors the development of an organic matter layer on the

surface . The resultant soil tends to develop a light coloured surface layer

and a heavier textured brownish coloured subsoil . The light coloured layer is

leached -- has lost various salts, plant nutrients, organic matter and clay,

which are partly re-deposited in the subsoil . As a result the forest soils are

lower in natural fertility than the dark coloured soils developed under grass

vegetation .

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In the most strongly leached gray soils of the forest, problems of

fertility and poor soil structure are encountered as soon as such soils are

broken up . Light textured gray soils are problem types .

The lowland soils include organic (peat or muskeg), meadow and other

soils associated with wet poorly drained conditions . Hence, drainage is required

before any agricultural development can take place. In addition, the kind u£

organic matter and underlying mineral material greatly influence the potential

fertility of these soils . Thick, raw peat deposits and light textured, light

coloured mineral subsoils are both unfavourable .

An agricultural classification of the soils of the northern settled

area and forest fringe is given below . It is suggested that in considering any

new areas for agriculture most of the soils should consist of groups A and B .

An Agricultural Classification of Northern Soils

A - .Good Agricultural Soils -- Moderately well drained upland soils on levelto gently undulating topography .

1 . Black parkland, loams to clays .2 . Degraded black-parkland-forest, loams to clays .3 . High lime (very calcareous) forest, loams to clays .

B - Good Soils (if drainage is established and if suitable methods of handlingpeaty surface are adopted) -- soils of poorly drained to undrained flatsand depressions .

1 . Poorly drained members of Group A soils .2 . Meadow loams to clays .3 . Thin or shallow sedge peat over loam to clay subsoils .

C - Fair to Good Soils -- if native fertility and soil structure are improved ;and in sandy soils, if wind erosion is controlled . Drainage and topographyas in Group A soils .

1 . Gray leached forest loams to clays .2 . Black, degraded black and high lime sandy soils .

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D - Poor to Fair Soils -- depending upon the degree to which adverse conditionsexist and upon management .

l . Gray forest sandy loams on level to gently rolling topography .2 . Thick or deep sedge peat over fine sandy loam to clay .3 . Mixed sedge-moss peat over loam to clay .4 . Rolling areas of Group A and C soils .

E - Very Poor (chiefly non-arable) Soils .

1 . Soils on strongly rolling to hilly topography and gray soilson moderately rolling topography .

2~ Soils of rough, broken, eroded land .3 . Excessively stony soils .4 . Dune sands .,5 . Sand or gravel_ deposits (may have peat surface) .6 . Thick or deep moss peat (muskeg) soils .7 . Wet marshes and swamps, not suitable for drainage .

When the above physical factors of land use are known they may be applied

to make decisions in regards to alternative land use . Thus to evaluate the

problem of the allocation of land in Northern Saskatchewan for agricultural or

forestry uses the authors present a portion of an address (l) given by the

late Hadley Van Vliet who was Head of the Department of Agricultural Economics,

University of Saskatchewan, till his untimely death in 1968.

"There is this furl-her question in this whole decision -- how far should

settlement go - as to where may be reasonable bounds between agricultural and

forest use in terms of the relative capabilities for use of a particular land

area . We are coming closer and closer to the point where we must no longer

regard forestry as,a residual use of a land area. The question should no longer

be one of how far can agriculture go, that is, where should agriculture stop .

There should be the reverse question as to how far should agriculture reasonably

go in the light of how far forestry can reasonably use a land area . Looking at

our own general northern potential in forest agricultural development, I think

we can say that there still is a pretty broad twilight zone of use in which you

(1)Proceedings of First Land Use Conference .

Prince Albert .

1951 .

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i44

can say that neither use can firmly establish itself . In other words, you car.

say that there is an area which is hazardous for the further extension of

agricultural development, there is also that in-between area in which forest

use for the most part perhaps does not show a very strong potential . In that

respect the broad problem then still perhaps is one of deciding where is a .

reasonable point to cut off farming for its own good . But within smaller

localities and within the areas of the individual farm where specific and

particular adaptations to forestry are involved there is a point of decision

as to how far agricultural- utilization is reasonable utilization as against a

higher potential which forest use may show.

There is, I think, a point for considering more and more closely the

cut-off line as being one in terms of what forestry can do in good use of the

land area as against what agriculture may do in mediocre use of that very

same area . In terms of the general position of some of those factors I think

one can say that for the most part we shouldn't attempt to overdo_ ourselves in

extending agriculture into the forest area . For the most part I think we can

afford to keep our standards with respect to agricultural opportunities in

forest area development relatively high, that we should consider for the most

part good agricultural opportunities but not consider opportunities which go

far down the line where they are going to give us precarious agricultural

development . There doesn't seem to be either the force of contribution or the

need for development of agriculture in that sense to say that we should push

agricultural development beyond that which would give us good standards of

farming opportunity .

Secondly, taking the question as to what basis of agricultural settlement

should be contemplated in the forest region there are I think a number of guide

posts of experiments which we might well perhaps take into account . The first

of those is that indiscriminate agricultural settlement of the forest area has

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145

proven extremely costly, and we can hardly afford to reconcile such a thought

in settlement again . Our main history of settlement in forestry so far has

been one of free and indiscriminate settlement . It has proven extremely

damaging to the interest of maintaining forest cover and maintaining good

forest use . It has proven costly to the maintenance of forestry in terms of

protection and in terms of eventual restoration . It has proven equally costly

to agriculture in terms of hazardous agricultural settlement, which often led

to eventual abandonment settlement, which has proven to be continually costly

in terms of the social cost of maintaining needed community services . We can

take as a general guide post perhaps the experience that any settlement in

the forest area from now on should be carefully bounded and carefully controlled .

It should be guided settlement in terms o£ filling it into the areas where for

the most part good potentials for long term agriculture remain .

The second guide post, suggested by experience, is that settlement

in forest areas has a high social cost . It implies a comparatively high cost

of facilities and social services on the basis of what usually are relatively

restricted, limited and more or less isolated areas . In the future we can

hardly reconcile a settlement pattern which gives us small isolated settlement

areas . The cost of maintaining such areas for agriculture is too high . The

cost of maintaining forest use in terms of protection and good forest utilization

on the basis of that type of settlement is also too high .

This suggests that,

as a general principle, future settlement in the forest area should be on the

basis of a general community principle whereby settlement should be restricted

to proceed in areas which are contiguous to established services and

communities . Such settlement should be based on areas which are large enough

to reasonably afford the development of economic facilities and community

services . We should not reconcile the high cost of scattered and isolated

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- 146

settlement which goes beyond the finge of a reasonable community pattern .

Thirdly, the question of the general relation of agriculture and forestry

use in the forest area . There perhaps are a number of other guide posts to

which one might cling in trying to find an opinion on some of these questions .

There are a number of features which have characterized our forest settlement

up to the present time . First of all, much of the reliance in our forest

settlement has been in terms of a population . We relegated our settlement

of forest areas to .a general population which has shifted into the forest zone

either in terms of a regular pioneering boom or in terms of exigencies such

as we saw during the depression period . It has meant that for the most part

the type of farm operator which has been available to forest settlement has

not been of the highest calibre . Very often it has meant that it pushed a

marginal to sub-marginal type of agricultural operator into the forest zone .

That's a generalization . It is not necessarily true as an overall representation,

but it does saythat for the most part we haven't been selective to any degree

whatsoever in terms of the type of farm operator which we have found in forest

agricultural development . We must recognize, and Dr . Mitchell, I think,

established the principle, that for the most part the utilization of our areas

of forest soils requires more care for the most part than most of our other

areas of major soils . On the other hand, I think we can also say that those

types of soilsprobably afford better rewards for good utilization than most of

our other soils . What it means is that our emphasis in the development of a

northern agricultural settlement should be in terms of the types of farm

operators who are of a high calibre and who can give those types of soils

both the type of care that they need and the type of attention which they can

afford . We can afford, I think, in northern agricultural development to think

of selective settlement on the basis of settlers of a high calibre, and we

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can afford perhaps,to think of selective area settlement along with selective

individual settlement as a general principle for the northern region .

Secondly, we can also say that we have regarded our forest settlement

in the sense of subsistence or semi-commercial types of agricultural settlement .

We have had in the background of our mind the picture of the man and his axe

going into the forest hewing out a garden and finally a farm unit . That type

of settlement has not proven itself in the forest area . Forest settlement

requires more capital and it means more capital more quickly for good develop-

ment than any other type of farming development . We need on the one hand a

concept of commercial settlement and we need it in terms of a scale of farming

unit which will give a good immediate starting unit and we need it in terms

of the types of assistance and capital which will give a man a start in forest

settlement right . A problem in forest settlement has been up to now the long

lag from the homestead period to the period 15, 20 and often as long as 30

years from that initial homestead period before a settler had even a starting

subsistence unit . That type of settlement has not proven conducive to good

settlement . It has for the most part not proven conducive to good farming

and agricultural development . If we're going to accept reasonable settlement

in the forest area it should be based on the concept of full scale commercial

settlement which accepts the normal principle that a man is going to live off

the farm and that he wants to develop that for a commercial unit just as

quickly as it can be developed .

Thirdly, there is also, I think, the general idea which has resided in

much of our forest settlement that for the most part forestry and agriculture

should be closely integrated in the settlement pattern . Mr. Marshall referred

to the general relation of forestry as being perhaps, up to now, a very

effective handmaiden to agricultural establishment . The timber permit was as

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an original settlement principle of our dominion land policies, one of the

finest devices which was devised in terms of establishing the homestead and

the homestead settler . The general idea has been perhaps carried too far,

however, in forest development in the suggestion that agriculture and forestry

can go closely hand in hand as two bases of agricultural utilization . In

early U .S . legislation it was the same thing . There, after the original U.S .

homestead principle was established, we had the timber homestead . Then we had

the reforestation homestead ; then we had the large forest homestead and so on .

In :the 1930's under the Farm Security Act there we have many ideas in

rehabilitation settlement of getting either a farm forest economy in which

a man ran a farm and had a little bit of forestry or a forest farm economy in

which you ran a bit of forest and had a little farm subsistence unit to take

care of your agricultural needs .

For the most part that basis of direct integration of agriculture and

forest utilization has not proven itself . Too much forestry has ruined the

farm as much as too much farming has ruined the forest . It looks as if we're

going to have to separate basis of utilization somewhat . When we think of

agricultural utilization it should be primarily in the sense of an opportunity

good long commercial opportunity in farming . Forestry can

basis for the establishment of agricultural

by providing additional employment

labor to aid the settler in breaking out and

In the long run, however, too close a tie

individual unit sense has proven perhaps

When a man has depended too much on

forestry he has neglected farming in the sense that he hasn't achieved the

amount of farm development which he should have .

On the other hand, when it

which guarantees a

serve desirably on an assistance

settlement in the earlier period

opportunities, giving off season

establishing himself in farming .

between farming and forestry in the

a drag on both forms of utilization .

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149 -

was a matter of forestry coming first and uppermost then it didn't again give

the basis for farm development, and this result is that unless you can think

of the very delicate balance between the two of them you should think perhaps

of agriculture and forest utilization as being integrated in a more indirect

sense rather than thinking of it in the close direct integration of individual

settlement units . For the most part, opinion would seem to favor the

suggestion of getting agriculture established on a good, long run, sound

commercial basis accepting the valuable aid which forestry can give in the

establishment period but from then on carrying the agriculture and forestry

position largely on an independent basis" .

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Appendix I

Sources of Information

1 . Acton, D .F. Preliminary Soil Survey of the Clearwater River Valley inNorth-Western Saskatchewan . Sask. Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask . 1962 .

2 . Atkinson, J .M ., and Palley, M .N . Forest Resources of the Pasquia-PorcupineArea of Saskatchewan . Department of Natural Resources, Province ofSaskatchewan. 1952 .

3 . Brown, A.R. Horticultural and Agricultural Possibilities of the SouthernPortion of the Churchill River Basin 1948-49 Survey .

Sask.Co-operative Extension Program. Sask. Dept . of Agriculture (Confidential) .1949 .

4. !Bristol, O .P ., Ellis, J .G ., and Johnson, W.E. Preliminary Soil Survey ofthe Green Lake Settlement. Sask. Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask . 1951 .

5 . Bristol, O,P ., and Moss, H .C. Preliminary Soil Traverses of LowlandsNorth-East of Carrot River. Sask. Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask . 1950 .

6 . Crean, J .P . The New North West . 1908 Report of Exploration Season1908-1909 . Dept . of the Interior Canada .

7 . Chambers, Ernes J . The Unexploited West . 1914. Dept . of the Interior.

8 . Clayton, J .S,, Ellis, J .G ., and Edwards, A .P. Soil Survey of theCumberland House Area . Sask . Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask . 1951 .

9 . Clayton, J .S ., Bristol, O .P ., and Ellis, J .G. Preliminary Soil Survey ofthe Lower Red Deer River Basin in Saskatchewan. Sask . Soil Survey,Univ . of Sask . 1950 .

10 . Clayton, J .S ., and Ellis, J .G. Report on the Soils of the LowerSaskatchewan Valley . Sask . Soil Survey, Univ. of Sask. 1952.

11 . Dowling, D.B . J .S .C. Report Vol . XIII Part F.F.

1902Report on Geological Exploration in Athabaska - Saskatchewan andKeewatin Districts .

12 .

Delury, J .S .

Geol . Survey Canada .

Summary Report 1924 Part 8 .Wapawekka and Deschambault Lakes Area, Saskatchewan .

13 . Ellis, J .H . The Pasquia Land Settlement Project . Interim ReportsNo . 1, 2 and 3 . Lands Branch, Department of Mines and NaturalResources . Winnipeg . 1956 .

14. Ellis, J .G., and Ballantyne, A .K . Report on the Soils of the BeauvalArea . Soil Science Dept ., Univ . of Sask . 1957 .

15 . Ellis, J .G . Soils and Potential Land Use of the Ravendale-Kennedy Creek.Plain . Sask. Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask. 1957 .

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16. Ellis, J .G . ; and Graveland, D. Preliminary Soil Survey of the SaskatchewanRiver Delta Project . Saskatchewan Institute of Pedology, Univ . ofSask . 1967 .

17 . Ellis, J .G ., and Moss, H .C . Preliminary Soil Survey of West La LocheSettlement on Methy Lake . Sask . Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask. 1958 .

18 . Forest Resources of the Prince Albert Area of Saskatchewan . ForestryBranch, Department of Natural Resources, Province of Saskatchewan .1953 .

19 . Forest Resources of the Meadow Lake Area of Saskatchewan . Forestry Branch,Department of Natural Resources, Province of Saskatchewan . 1954 .

20 . Halliday, W.E.D . A Forest Classification for Canada . Ottawa .Dept . of Mines and Resources, Forest Service, Bul . 89 . 1937 .

21 . Kabzems, A., and Kirby, C .L . The Growth and Yield of Jack Pine inSaskatchewan . Department of Natural Resources, Forestry Branch . 1956 .

22 . Kitto, F .H . Dept . of the Interior 1919 . The Province of Saskatchewan,its Development and Opportunities .

23 . ----------

Natural Resources Intelligence Branch 1919 . An Account ofa Reconnaissance Expedition from McMurray to Hudson Bay Mostly byCanoe .

24 . McInnes, W. Geol . Survey of Canada . Summary Report 1907Pasquia Hills and Lower Carrot River Region .

25 . ----------

Geol . Survey Can . Summary Report 1910 . Saskatchewan RiverDistrict. N.W . of CumberlandLake .

26 . ----------

Memoir No . 30 . Geological Survey Canada . 1913 . The Basinsof the Nelson and Churchill Rivers .

27 . Moss, H .C . A Preliminary Study of Soils of the Churchill River Basin ofNorthern Saskatchewan . Soils Dept ., Univ . of Sask . 1950 .

28 . Mitchell, J ., and Moss, H .C . The Soils of the Canadian Section of theGreat Plains . Soil Science Society of America Proceedings Vol . 13 .1948 .

29 . Mitchell, J ., Clayton, J .S ., and Gross, R .A . Preliminary Soil Survey of aPortion of the Carrot River Valley . Sask . Soil Survey . 1944 .

30 . Mitchell, J ., and Hutcheon, W.L . Soil Survey of Candle Lake Area .Sask. Soil Survey, Univ . of Sask . 1939 .

31 . Mitchell, J ., Moss, H .C., and Clayton, J .S . Soil Survey of SouthernSaskatchewan . Soil Survey Report No . 12, Univ . of Sask . 1944 .

32 . Mitchell, J ., Moss, H .C ., and Clayton, J .S . Soil Survey of Saskatchewan .Soil Survey Report No . 13, Univ . of Sask . 1950 .

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35 .

- 15 2 -

33 . National Soil Survey Committee . Report of the Sub-Committee on LandscapeFeatures . 1948 .

34 . Proceedings Resources For People . Saskatchewan Resources Conference .Saskatoon . January, 1964.

Proceedings of First Land Use Conference . Saskatchewan Institute ofAgrologists and Canadian Institute of Forestry . Prince Albert .December, 1951 .

36 . Proceedings of the Fourth National Meeting of the National Soil SurveyCommittee of Canada . 1960 .

37 . Rowe, J .S . Forest Regions of Canada . Department of Northern Affairs andNational Resources . Forestry Branch . Ottawa . 1959 .

38. Reports Dom: Water Power and Reclamation Service . Dept . of the Interior1923-24, 1924-25 .

Carrot River Triangle Drainage Project .

39 . Surveyors Reports . Topographic Survey of Canada by Dominion Land Surveyors .

40 . Saskatchewan's Forest Inventory 1947 to 1956. Department of NaturalResources, Forestry Branch . 1959 .

41 . Sproule, J.C . The Pleistocene Geology of the Cree Lake RegionSask. Trans . Royal Society. Canada . Section IV. 1939.

42 . Tyrrel, J .B . assisted by Dowling, D.B .Geol . Survey of Canada . Vol . VIII 1895 . Report D.Report on the Country Between Athabaska Lake and the Churchill River.

,43 . ---------- Geol . Survey of Canada Vol . IX 1896 Part F.(around the Pas)

44 . ---------- Geol . Survey of Canada New Series Vol . VIII Part F .1902 Report on the North-eastern Portion of the District ofSaskatchewan and Adjacent Parts of the District of Keewatin .

45 . Warren Upham. The Glacial Lake Agassy. Monograph of United StatesGeological Survey. Vol . XXV. 1896.

46 . Worcester, W.G . Clay Resources of Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan Departmentof Natural Resources . Technical and Economic Series. Report No. 2.1950 .

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Appendix II

Soil Classification

The soils of the Northern Provincial Forest were classified according

to the system adopted by the 1960 meeting of the National Soil Survey Committee

of Canada . The Northern Provincial Forest area includes soils in the Chernozemic,

Podzolic, Regosolic, Gleysolic and Organic Orders respectively. The character-

istics used to identify the soils which occur within the aforementioned Orders

are as follows .

Criteria and Definitions for Chernozemic Soils

Chernozemic Order soils are well to imperfectly drained soils developed

under xero- or meso-phyllic grasses and forbs or under transition grassland-

forest vegetation . Chernozemic soils are characterized by the occurrence of

dark colored humus-mineral surface horizons, (Ah or Aa) of high base-saturation

with a cationic ratio of calcium to other ions significantly greater than 1

and with flocculated surface structures that do not become massive on wetting

and drying . Carbon-nitrogen ratio is 17 or less if virgin and usually does

not exceed 13 if cultivated . The thickness and darkness in colour of the Ah

horizon must be sufficient to produce an Aa horizon of at least 5 inches in

thickness, one Munsell (1) unit darker in value than the C horizon and should

be lower in chroma than the B horizon if present . The high base-saturation

of the A horizon is apparently maintained by annual cyclic growth and

decomposition of a vegetative ground cover dominated by xero- or meso-phyllic

grasses and forbs .

Dark Gray Chernozemic Soils

A Great Group separation whose virgin A horizon may have a colour onthe surface of the peds comparable to the Dark Brown or Black soils, (valuesdarker than 4 .5), but will crush or rub out to a grayer or browner colour ofhigher value or chroma, ranging in Munsell values from 3 to 5 .5 . A "salt and

(1)Munsell Soil Color Charts . Munsell Color Company, Inc ., Baltimore 2,Maryland, U.S .A .

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pepper effect" i .e. lighter grayish spots or bands may be observable in this

type of horizon, and it may exhibit a tendency to blocky or platy structure,

which crushes to a granular condition . Where these latter conditions are

significantly expressed it may be possible to separate an Ahej horizon from

the Ah .

Such soils should have Ah, or L-H, Ah horizons of sufficient thickness

and darkness in colour to give an Aa horizon with a range of Munsell colour

values darker than 5 .5 dry.

These soils in their original or undisturbed state support a mixed

vegetation of grasses, forbs and trees but with a dominant ground cover of

meso-phyllic grasses and forbs characteristic of transition areas between

grassland and forest vegetation . Depending on the extent and development of

tree cover, these soils in virgin state may have an organic, L-H, horizon,

but are mainly characterized by an amphistratic Ah horizon of humus-mineral

character .

Rego Chernozemic Profile types : Ah, Ck, C or Ah, C .

Soils with Ah or Aa horizons as defined in the Order and Great Groups

underlain by C horizons . No significant depth of colour B is permitted .

These profiles may be further separated on the basis of the occurrence of

salts, or of gleyed (imperfectly drained) horizons . Grumic or self-mulching

characteristics may occur in Rego profiles of high clay content.

In profiles on well-drained sites or with excessive surface drainage,

the A horizon.i s commonly free of lime and overlies a weak Ck horizon of

carbonate accumulation above the calcareous parent material . In the gleyed

(imperfectly drained) rego-profiles, carbonates of secondary origin frequently

extend into the A horizons due to precipitation from the rise of saturated

solutions of lime bearing waters .

In profiles with Grumic characteristics because of the self-mulching

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- 155--

properties of the solum and the sloughing of surface material into cracks,

the Ah horizon is not as sharply defined as in other Rego Chernozemic

profiles and tends to merge into a transitional AC horizon .

Calcareous Chernozemic Profile types : Ah, Bmk, Ck, C .

Soils with Ah or Aa horizons as defined in the Order and Great Groups

underlain by a colour Bmk from which free carbonates are not completely

removed . This colour Bmk horizon is usually weakly prismatic in macro

structure . A lighter coloured Ck horizon of carbonate accumulation is usually

present above the C .

This profile type may be divided into a well-drained and a gleyed

(imperfectly-drained) type . In the well-drained type the carbonates are

present in the B through insufficient leaching ; in the latter they are frequently

an expression of upward movement of soluble carbonates . In profiles with

grumic (self-mulching) characteristics, the separations between Ah, Bmk and

Ck horizons tend to be diffuse and transitional .

Criteria and Definitions for Podzolic Soils

Podzolic Order soils are well and imperfectly drained soils developed

under forest or heath having light coloured eluvial (Ae) horizons and illuvial

(B) horizons with accumulations of sesquioxides, organic matter or clay ; or

any combination of these .

Gray Wooded Great G roup of the Podzolic Order

Soils with organic surface borizon(s) (L-H), with lighter coloured

eluvial horizon(s) (Ae) and with illuviated horizons (Bt) in which clay is

the main accumulation product . Developed on basic parent materials . The

solum generally has a medium to high degree of base saturation .

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0 rthic Gray Wooded

Profile :

L-H,

(Ah)Ae, (AB)Bt, C .

Soils with organic surface horizons (L-H), with a light coloured Ae

and a Bt . They may have thin Ah, (less than 2") slightly mottled lower Ae

and a marked AB horizon .

- 15 6 -

Dark Gray Wooded Profiles : L-H, Ah or Ahe, Ae, (AB), Bt, C, orL-H, (Ah), Aeh, Btj, C .

Soils with organic surface (L-H) and with Chernozemic Ah or Ahe (more

than 2") over 'a light coloured Ae, or soils with organic surface over a

prominent dark gray Aeh horizon and underlain by Bt . The plowed layer of both

subtypes is darker than that of the orthic subgroup .

Bisequa Gray Wooded Profile : L-H, Ae, Bf, C/Bt, C or L-H, Ae, Bfl, (Bf2)/Ae,Bt, C .

Gray Wooded soils in which a podzol sequence of horizons has developed

in Ae and overlying a continuous textural (Bt) horizon at depths of less than

30 inches from the surface .

developed (orthic) it must be less than 18 inches thick . This profile is also

referred to in the soillegend as Podzolized Gray Wooded .

Podzol Great Group_ of the Podzolic Order

If the solum of the podzol sequence is well

The undisturbed soils have organic surface horizons) (L-H), a light

coloured eluvial horizon (Ae), and an illuvial B horizon (Bf or Bfh) in which

organic matter and sesquioxides are the main accumulation products . The

B horizon contains less than 10% of organic matter but a thin (less than

thick) Bh horizon containing more than 10% organic matter may be present

immediately under the Ae . The solum is generally moderately to strongly

unsaturated .

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Orthic- Regosols

Criteria

Regosolic Order

discernible horizons or

organic-mineral surface

than 12 inches thick.

and without visible evidence

as Ah horizons that will not

Munsell unit darker in value

over bedrock are referred to

Mull_ Regosols

- 15 7 -

Orthic Podzol Profile : L-H, Ae, (Bh), Bfh of Bf, C .

Soils with organic surface horizon(s) (L-H), a light coloured eluvial

horizon (Ae) more than I" thick and a friable Bfh or Bf horizon of high chroma .

A Bh sub-horizon containing more than 10% organic matter is lacking or less

than 2" thick .

and_Definitions for_Regosolic Soils

Great Group of the Regosolic Order

Only one great group has been recognized

group definition is the same as for the Order .

soils are well and imperfectly drained soils which lack

in which horizon development is limited to a non-chernozemic

horizon (Ah) or to organic surface horizons (L-H) less

to date . Therefore the great

Soils lacking any horizon development or with thin or weak Ah horizons

(Weak Ah horizons are defined

produce Aa horizons of 5 inches thickness one

than the C horizons - dry colours) .

in the soil legend as Lithosols .

of salts or gleying.

0 rthic Regosols

Soils which have a distinct non-chernozemic Ah horizon, little or no

L-H, and without visible evidence of salts or gleying .

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Criteria and Definitions for Gleysolic Soils

Gleysolic Order soils are soils with organic horizons (12 inches thick),

or with an Ah horizon, or with both, or without these surface horizons but with

some organic material dispersed throughout the mineral soils . The subsoils

usually show gleying and are dull colored but may have brighter colored

prominent mottles .

Soils associated with wetness .

They have . developed under various

climatic and vegetative conditions and in the presence of a high or highly

fluctuating water table .

Meadow Great Group of - the Gleysolic Order

Soils with dark coloured Ah horizons more than 2 inches thick which

grade into dull coloured horizons that may or may not show gleying . May

have organic horizons not exceeding 12 inches in thickness .

These soils have developed under grasses, sedges and swamp-forests .

Orthic Meadow

Soils with a non-calcareous, Ah horizon which grades into a dull

coloured horizon or horizons . Underlying material are usually calcareous .

May have organic horizons up to 3 inches thick .

Peaty Meadow

Any meadow soil with 3 to 12 inches of peat .

Gleysol Great Group of the Gleysolic Order

Soils with organic horizons less than 12 inches thick or without these

horizons and with a strongly gleyed mineral horizon or horizons . May have a

thin Ah horizon up to 2 inches thick .

horizons .

These soils developed under swamp-forest, heath or swamp vegetation .

No noticeable eluvial or illuvial

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Rego-Gleysol

Organic Soil

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Soils with less than one inch of peat or muck on the surface and without

an Ah horizon . Some organic material in the form of peat, muck, or organic mud

may be dispersed through the mineral soil . Strongly gleyed mineral soil occurs

at or near the surface .

Peaty-Gleyso l

All Gleysol soils except Rego-Gleysol with 6 to 12 inches of peat .

Criteria and__Definitions for . Organic -Soils

A soil that contains at least 20 per cent organic matter, is 12 inches

or more in depth, and has no horizon development in the mineral substratum

other than gleying .

Sphagnum Peat

Organic soil material consisting predominantly of sphagnum moss,

leaves and stems .

Fibrous Peat

Organic soil material consisting predominantly of the partially decayed

remains of marsh plants other than sphagnum .

Disintegrated Peat

Organic soil material consisting predominantly of finely divided,

unidentifiable plant remains, that are not chemically decomposed .

Woody Peat

Organic soil material consisting predominantly of small fragments

of the woody parts of plants .

Muck

Organic soil material consisting predominantly of finely divided

unidentifiable plant materials .

Solubility in saturated - sodium pyrophosphate

solution is greater than three-quarters of one per cent .

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Sedimentary Peat

Organic soil material consisting predominantly of the fecal remains

of small aquatic animals . Material is plastic and non-sticky .

Diatomaceous Earth

matter .

Marl

An unconsolidated deposit of the remains of diatoms mixed with organic

An impure unconsolidated deposit of carbonate of lime .

Characteristics to be Used in Examination_ of Organic Soil Profiles

Depth - to mineral layer or to the first impermeable layer.

Muck - l . Less than 24" (Shallow)2 . 24"-48°' (Deep)3 . 48" + (Very deep)

Peat - 1 . Less than 36 ° ' (Shallow)2 . 36'°-72" (Deep)3 . 72" + (Very deep)

Reaction - pH of individual layers examined .

Name of Underlying Material - Examples

1 . Shallow organic soil overlying sand .2 . Shallow organic soil overlying loam and silt loam .3 . Shallow organic soil overlying clay.4 . Shallow organic soil overlying marl .