Nanticoke Creek (Ontario)

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Nanticoke Creek is a watercourse in Haldimand County, Ontario.[1] It is approximately 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) long, emptying into Lake Erie approximately 15 km west of the mouth of the Grand River. The creek drains approximately 180 square kilometres (69 sq mi).[2]

The small village of Nanticoke, Ontario, was founded at its mouth between 1830 and 1850.[3] The Nanticoke were a dependent nation of the Iroquois Confederacy.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Our Watershed". Long Point Region Conservation Authority. Retrieved 2017-07-21.
  2. ^ "Executive Summary: Long Point Conservation Area" (PDF). Long Point Conservation Area. January 2008. Retrieved 2018-12-12. Nanticoke Creek, which drains about 180 square kilometres, begins as a cool water fishery in the Norfolk Sand Plain with groundwater-fed base flows. From there it enters a series of lakes, ponds, and wetlands called the Waterford Ponds. It changes to a warm water fishery after it passes into the Haldimand Clay Plain past Waterford. It enters Lake Erie at Nanticoke.
  3. ^ Edward S. Rogers, Donald B. Smith (1994). "Aboriginal Ontario: Historical Perspectives on the First Nations". Dundurn Press. ISBN 9781554880638. Retrieved 2017-07-21.

42°47′51″N 80°04′07″W / 42.7974°N 80.0687°W / 42.7974; -80.0687