The Omineca Mountains, also known as "the Ominecas", are a group of remote mountain ranges in the Boreal Cordillera of north-central British Columbia, Canada. They are bounded by the Finlay River on the north, the Rocky Mountain Trench (here filled by Lake Williston) on the east, the Nation Lakes on the south, and the upper reaches of the Omineca River on the west.[1][2][3] They form a section of the Continental Divide, that, in this region, separates water drainage between the Arctic and Pacific Oceans. The lower course of the Omineca River flows through the heart of the range. To the south of the Ominecas is the Nechako Plateau, to the west the Skeena Mountains and Hazelton Mountains, to the north the Spatsizi Plateau and the Stikine Ranges, while east across the Rocky Mountain Trench are the Muskwa Ranges.

Omineca Mountains
The Ominecas
The Ingenika, Tucha, and Russel ranges overlooking Pelly Lake
Highest point
Elevation2,400 m (7,900 ft) Edit this on Wikidata
Dimensions
Area47,901 km2 (18,495 sq mi)
Geography
Location map of the Omineca Mountains
CountryCanada
RegionBritish Columbia
Range coordinates56°30.0′N 125°30.2′W / 56.5000°N 125.5033°W / 56.5000; -125.5033
Parent rangeInterior Mountains

"The Omineca" or "the Omineca Country" is the entire area plus some of the northern Nechako Plateau adjacent to the Ominecas, where there has been more settlement and, in the past, extensive gold-mining exploration and prospecting (in the same period as the Omineca, Fraser Canyon and Cariboo Gold Rushes, i.e. 1860s).

Sub-ranges

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Rivers

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ BC Names/GeoBC entry "Omineca Mountains"
  2. ^ "S. Holland, Landforms of British Columbia, Province of British Columbia, 1976, pp 63-65" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-04-26.
  3. ^ "map from Bulletin 48: Landforms of British Columbia" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2014-04-26.