The Illecillewaet River is a tributary of the Columbia River located in British Columbia, Canada. Fed by the Illecillewaet Glacier in Glacier National Park, the river flows approximately to the southwest, where it flows into the north end of Upper Arrow Lake at Revelstoke. The river's drainage basin is .
History
The Illecillewaet has been of importance since the discovery in 1881 of an approach along the river to what is now known as the
Rogers Pass across the
Selkirk Mountains. This pass, discovered by a surveyor for the
Canadian Pacific Railway named
Albert Bowman Rogers, ultimately became the route through the Selkirks of Canada's first
transcontinental railway. In 1962 the
Trans-Canada Highway was constructed along the Illecillewaet west of Rogers Pass.
Natural history
The
watershed surrounding the river was quickly recognized to be of exceptional
ecological significance, and Glacier National Park was established in the area in 1886, followed by
Mount Revelstoke National Park in 1914.
See also
References