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How the Queen Dammed Little Manicouagan Lake
Episode 4447

How the Queen Dammed Little Manicouagan Lake

pplpod · pplpod

March 9, 202622m 12s

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Show Notes

In this episode of pplpod, we journey into the rugged heart of Quebec to explore Petit Lac Manicouagan—a remote, spoon-shaped body of water that serves as a profound microcosm of human history and environmental engineering. We peel back the layers of this "simple blue speck" on the map to reveal a collision of ancient Innu heritage, where the lake was known as a source for birchbark drinking vessels, and 20th-century industrial ambition.

The discussion traces a fascinating timeline: from a 1957 royal decree by the Queen of England granting water rights to U.S. Steel, to the construction of the Hart-Jaune dam that transformed a wild river into an industrial battery. We also confront the sobering disappearance of local caribou herds and the high-stakes data science now required to manage the basin. By the end, we're left wondering if the same statistical models used to maximize power could one day be used to mimic the river’s ancient, natural rhythms.