The community of Moosonee (Moosonee Area Development Board) in the District
of Cochrane, Township of Moose is a small community of 2300 (approximately
85% aboriginal) located on the west bank of the Moose River, approximately
13 km inland from the west coast of James Bay. Moosonee is accessible via
air, train, and water; and a winter road connects it with other northern
coastal communities. The primary industries in Moosonee are institutional
(schools, hospitals, government facilities), and service oriented (including
tourism).
Moosonee generally has long cold winters and short warm summers, with James
Bay acting as a thermal reservoir to moderate and skew spring and fall
temperatures. Freeze-up on the Moose River normally occurs in late October
or early November, with mean daily minimum January temperatures approximately
-27°C. Spring break-up occurs in April. Mean annual precipitation is
approximately 660 mm, and mean annual snowfall is approximately 2413 mm
(snow depth). Maximum accumulations of snow occur in mid-May.
Moosonee is situated in the Hudson Bay Lowlands. The general physiography
of the Hudson Bay Lowlands is comprised of Ordovician to Cretaceous carbonate
rocks, overlain by muskeg with little relief, with a shallow elevation
rise from Hudson and James Bays near sea level and increasing inland. The
region, which is the largest area of organic terrain in the world, is characterized
as a flat swampy plain, with up to 4 m of organic sediment (up to one metre
in the Moosonee area), and having poor drainage. The Moosonee area is underlain
by a crystalline bedrock (mean transmissivity 210 gpd/ft or 2.6 m2/d) at
approximately 300m below sea level. Above that, a horizon of limestone
and dolomite bedrock, considered to be an aquifer, has a thickness of approximately
275m, storativity of 4x10(-6), and a mean transmissivity of approximately
10(-4)m2/s. Other bedrock materials include Ordovician sandstone, Silurian
sandstone, and siltstone. The till of the Hudson Bay Lowlands ranges from
60 to 145m in some areas. The overburden is largely comprised of marine
clay and silt, a vestige of the post-glacial Tyrrell Sea. In Moosonee,
this silty clay is generally overlain by a gravelly sand horizon with an
approximately 0.5m thickness, which, in turn, is overlain by a fine silty
sand horizon with an approximate thickness of 2 - 3m. The overburden is
considered to be an aquitard, with a mean transmissivity of approximately
5000gpd/ft (62m2/d). Within Moosonee, perched groundwater has been identified
within 0 - 1 m below ground surface.
Commercial and domestic water supply is currently provided by two water
treatment plants drawing from Store Creek and Butler Creek, respectively.
Water treatment includes chlorination. A new water treatment plant, drawing
from the Moose River, is under construction, with an expected commissioning
date in December 1999. The new plant is expected to replace the existing
two water treatment plants. There are two domestic water wells within a
75 km radius of Moosonee: one located on Moose Factory Island, and one
located in the town of Moose River. Both wells were drilled by the Government
of Canada. The well at Moose Factory (within 5 km of Moosonee), struck
brackish water. Four observation wells were installed by the Ontario Ministry
of the Environment in Moose Township in 1972. These wells generally observed
fresh water at a depth of 0.9 - 1.8 m, and salt water at a depth of 18
- 20 m. Moosonee has two wastewater treatment plants. A new wastewater
treatment plant is also under construction, and is expected to be commissioned
in December 1999.
Hudson Bay Drainage Basin, in which Moosonee is located, is imperfectly
drained, the impeded run-off resulting in a perched watertable. Contributing
to drainage problems are widespread permafrost and a short frost-free period.
The Albany and Moose Rivers account for two-thirds of the total Ontario
arctic watershed discharge, with peak flows during spring break-up in May.
River water levels can reach 15 metres above mid-summer levels during this
period. As well, frequent ice jams cause blocked drainage and result in
flooding, providing recharge to the perched aquifer.
Tidal influences of Hudson and James Bays are reportedly experienced as
far as 15 to 20 km upstream on larger rivers, such as the Moose. The Moose
River experiences tidal depth fluctuations of approximately two metres.
Tidal effects, along with direct infiltration from James Bay, may be contributing
factors to salt intrusions into the lower aquifer. In the sedimentary limestone/dolomite
bedrock, total dissolved solids are approximaterly 4000mg/L, and common
inorganic parameters are far in excess of permissible criteria for public
use. The upper aquifer is effectively fresh water, likely due to infiltration
of precipitation and surface water flooding. Total dissolved solids are
approximately 400mg/L, and except for iron, common inorganic parameters
are lower than permissible criteria for public use. Mercury, from natural
sources, has been reported in many surface water bodies in the Hudson Bay
Lowlands region, but there is no suggestion in the literature of mercury
contamination of groundwater or surface water in the Moosonee area. Operations
at the former Moosonee Radar Base, owned and operated by the Department
of National Defence until 1976, have resulted in elevated levels or exceedances
of generic groundwater quality criteria for various petroleum constituents,
including benzene, toluene, and total petroleum hydrocarbons.
Due to concerns regarding potability and potential contamination of groundwater,
water supply is strictly drawn from surface fresh water sources: currently
Store and Butler Creeks; in the future, Moose River.
"Ontario Municipal Directory", Association of Municipal Clerks and Treasurers
of Ontario, ISBN 0-921067-02-X, 1996.
"Moosonee - Community Profile", Moosonee Area Development Board.
"Moosonee District - Background Information", Ministry of Natural Resources,
1985.
Water Well Records 16 No. 468 (January 1949) and 16 No. 1362 (April 1966),
Ontario Ministry of the Environment.
"Ground Water Bulletin Report", Ontario Ministry of the Environment, June
1991.
"Groundwater in Ontario: Hydrogeology, Quality Concerns and Management",
S.M. MacRitchie, C. Pupp, G. Grove, Ken W. Howard, P. Lapcevic, NHRI Contribution
No. CS-94011, November 1994.
"Northern Ontario Water Resources Studies", K.T. Wang and V.I. Chin, Ministry
of the Environment, 1978.
Moosonee Area Development Board: (705) 336-2993
Ontario Ministry of the Environment, Toronto: (416) 235-6288
Ontario Ministry of the Environment, South Porcupine: 705-235-1600