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Grenville Channel

Coordinates: 53°37′00″N 129°43′00″W / 53.61667°N 129.71667°W / 53.61667; -129.71667
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Grenville Channel
Grenville Channel photographed by Frank La Roche in the late 1890s
Grenville Channel photographed by Frank La Roche in the late 1890s
Grenville Channel is located in British Columbia
Grenville Channel
Grenville Channel
Coordinates53°37′00″N 129°43′00″W / 53.61667°N 129.71667°W / 53.61667; -129.71667

Grenville Channel is a strait on the North Coast of British Columbia, Canada, located between Pitt Island and the mainland to the south of Prince Rupert[1]. The channel is part of the Inside Passage shipping route, about 45 nautical miles (83 km; 52 mi) long and is 0.2 nautical miles (0.37 km; 0.23 mi) wide at the narrowest part[2].

The Grenville Channel Fault that forms the channel dates back to the Cretaceous[3]. Both sides of the channel are mountainous and densely wooded[2], and a linear magnetic anomaly runs parallel to the channel south of 51"30'N[4].

See also

References

  1. ^ "Grenville Channel". BC Geographical Names.
  2. ^ a b "Chart 3772, 3773, Grenville Channel". Sailing Directions, British Columbia Coast, (Northern Portion). II (Ninth Edition): 158–159. 1983.
  3. ^ Nelson J, Diakow L, van Staal C, Chipley D (2013). "Ordovician volcanogenic sulphides in the southern Alexander terrane, coastal NW British Columbia: geology, Pb isotopic signature, and a case for correlation with Appalachian and Scandinavian deposits" (PDF). British Columbia Geological Survey. 2013 (1): 13–33. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
  4. ^ Chardon D, Andronicos C, Holliste L (April 1999). "Large-scale transpressive shear zone patterns and displacements within magmatic arcs: The Coast Plutonic Complex, British Columbia". TECTONICS. 18 (2): 278–292. Retrieved 2020-06-23.