Pronounced (/brəˈdɔːr/brə-DOR[4] or /bræˈdɔːr/brad-OR),[5] maps before 1872 name it Le Lac de Labrador (or more simply Labrador).[6][7]Labrador was the name given by the Portuguese to much of eastern Canada. It meant farmer, and is cognate with labourer.[8] An error of folk etymology, the name is spelt to resemble the French languageArm ofGold, a homonym. It is also called locally The Bras d'Or Lakes.
In Mi'kmawi'simk, the lake's name, Pitupaq, refers to the brackish waters, meaning "the long salt water."
Geography
The lake has a surface area of 1099 square kilometers.[9] Three arms stretch out to the north east. At the top, the Great Bras d'Or Channel connects to the ocean via a navigable channel. The maximum depth is 287 m (942 ft) in St. Andrews Channel.[10] It sits in a 3,500 square kilometre drainage basin.[11]
The western side is generally shallow,[12] and is part of an extensive drumlin field. Steep hills rise abruptly on the northwestern side, to the Cape Breton Highlands.[13]
The Denys, Middle, Baddeck, and Georges Rivers all empty into the lake. The lake water has lower salinity than the surrounding ocean, and varies from about 20 parts per thousand near river mouths to 29 parts per thousand in deeper areas.[12]
The lake is connected to the North Atlantic by two natural channels; the Great and Little Bras d'Or Channels which pass on either side of Boularderie Island.[15] The southern tip of the lake is connected to the Atlantic Ocean via the St. Peters Canal, built for shipping traffic in the 1860s.
The restricted channels to the ocean cause a reduction in tidal range.[12]
In southwestern Nova Scotia, there is archaeological evidence that traces traditional land use and resources to at least 4,000 years.[16]: 23 [17][18]Mi'kmaq peoples occupied lands around Bras d'Or Lake when European explorers first arrived. Named Unama'ki in their language, it is the fire (or capital district) of their country, Mi'kma'ki, part of the greater Wabanaki Confederacy of the Dawnland region. The Mi'kmaq call the lake Pitupaq, meaning long salt water. A French trading post was built in 1650.[9]Alexander Graham Bell built an estate Beinn Bhreagh where he established a research laboratory, and used the lake to test man-carrying kites, airplanes and hydrofoil boats.
^"Bras d'Or Lake (C. B.)". Place-names of the province of Nova Scotia by Thomas J. Brown. Royal Print & Litho. in Halifax, N.S. 1922. 1922.
^ abFrancis, Daniel (2014). "Bras d'Or Lake". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 1 August 2021. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
^ abcd"Bras d'Or Lake". Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History. 28 January 2006. Archived from the original on 28 January 2006. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
^"Bras d'Or Lake". www.unesco.org. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Archived from the original on 1 August 2021. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
^Christianson, D.J. 1979. The Use of Subsistence Strategy Descriptions in Determining Wabanaki Residence Location. Journal of Anthropology at McMaster 5( 1 ).
^Ferguson, R. 1986. Archaeological Sites of Kejimkujik National Park, Nova Scotia. Unpublished Ms., Parks Canada , Halifax.