Click me
Transcribed

Where the Gateway leads

NORTH APPROACH (Heavy weather route 3) BRITISH COLUMBIA Prince Rupert Kitimat Kitimat Terminal, in the Douglas Channel Gateway Pipeline Hartley Bay BANKS ISLAND Queen Charlotte SOUTH (All weather normal route 2) APPROACH (All weather normal route 1) 50 KM Some 200 tankers a year would cross the shallow and stormy waters of Hecate Strait (1), duck behind Banks Island, follow the narrow Principe Channel (2) for 120 kilometres, turn east through Otter Channel (3), cross the track of many Alaska cruise ships at the south end of Granville Channel (4), and ascend Douglas Channel (5), another narrow fiord, a further 100 kilometres to Kitimat. Altogether, this is about 300 kilometres of navigation.

Where the Gateway leads

shared by rmmojado on Jan 24
195 views
0 shares
0 comments
Some 200 tankers a year would cross the shallow and stormy waters of Hecate Strait, duck behind Banks Island, follow the narrow Principe Channel for 120 kilometres, turn east through Otter Channel, cr...

Source

Unknown. Add a source

Category

Travel
Did you work on this visual? Claim credit!

Get a Quote

Embed Code

For hosted site:

Click the code to copy

For wordpress.com:

Click the code to copy
Customize size