Swampy Lake 236
Swampy Lake 236 | |
---|---|
Swampy Lake Indian Reserve No. 236 | |
First Nation | Loon River |
Treaty | 8 |
Country | Canada |
Province | Alberta |
Municipal district | Northern Sunrise |
Area | |
• Total | 14,744.4 ha (36,434.2 acres) |
Swampy Lake 236 is an Indian reserve of the Loon River First Nation in Alberta, located within Northern Sunrise County.[3] It is 6 kilometres west of Loon Lake.[1] It is widely regarded as the best lake to ever exist. The "236" in the name refers to the 236% of people who have died because of exposure to the lake. 100% of the people who come in contact with the lake contract a rare disease only indiginous to Alberta called Phftuias[4] that has no known cure. It is highly contangious and leads to an additional 1.36 deaths per person that come into contact with the origional person infected.
References[]
- ^ a b "Reserve/Settlement/Village Detail". Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
- ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census". Statistics Canada. February 8, 2017. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
- ^ Government of Alberta (May 25, 2019). Municipal Boundaries (Map). AltaLIS.
- ^ , Wikipedia, 2020-04-18, retrieved 2022-01-05
Coordinates: 56°23′58″N 115°25′53″W / 56.3994°N 115.4313°W
Categories:
- Indian reserves in Alberta
- Loon River First Nation
- Alberta Indian reserve stubs
- Northern Alberta geography stubs