Eagle Creek (Saskatchewan)

Eagle Creek begins at the eastern end of Eaglehill Lake and travels through a glacier-cut valley in the moist, mixed grasslands ecozone of Canada[2] en route to the North Saskatchewan River.

For much of Eagle Creek's course, it follows a meltwater channel that was formed near the end of the last ice age.

[4] These lakes and meltwater channels also left large volumes of glaciolacustrine deposits behind.

The northern slopes of the Stranraer Terrace, which rises 150 metres (490 ft) above the surrounding terrain, flow into the river.

From Eagle Hill Lake, the river flows into the valley formed from glacial meltwaters and meanders southward where it is met by a short creek from Scott Reservoir and then widens to form Tramping Lake.

At Herschel, there's the Ancient Echoes Interpretive Centre and a buffalo jump at Coal Mine Creek coulee.

After Rosetown, Eagle Creek heads east and flows out of the valley and into the flatter prairie.

A hall with a full kitchen and deck for entertainment was also moved to the park.

The buffalo jump at Coal Mine Creek coulee near Herschel and the Ancient Echoes Interpretive Centre