Muskrat River (Grand lac Saint François)

The Muskrat River (in French: rivière Muskrat) is a tributary of Grand lac Saint François which constitutes the head lake of the Saint-François River. The course of the Muskrat river "crosses the territory of the municipality of Adstock, in the Les Appalaches Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Chaudière-Appalaches, on the South Shore of the St. Lawrence River, in Quebec, Canada.

Geography
The main neighboring watersheds of the Muskrat River are:
 * north side: Tardif-Bizier stream, Hamel River, Fortin-Dupuis River, Prévost-Gilbert River;
 * east side: Petite rivière Muskrat;
 * south side: Grand lac Saint François;
 * west side: rivière de l'Or.

The Muskrat River has its source south of the village of Saint-Method-de-Frontenac and north of Lake Rochu (altitude: 343 m).

From its head, the Muskrat River flows on 5.1 km westward, crossing route 267, to the east shore of Lac Bolduc (length 1.8 km; maximum width: 0.8 km; altitude: 311 m) that the current crosses along its full length to the west. The south and east shores of Lake Bolduc have several dozen cabins.

From Bolduc Lake, the Muskrat River flows on 5.3 km towards the southwest in a forest environment, collecting water from the Poulin and Rodrigue rivers and passing east of the village of Saint-Daniel, up to its mouth.

The mouth of the Muskrat river flows into a marsh area (on the east side) at the bottom of the "Baie aux Rats Musqués" which is an extension of the northeast shore of Grand lac Saint François. The mouth of the Muskrat River flows at its confluence with the Petite rivière Muskrat, in the northern area of Frontenac National Park.

Toponymy
Formerly, this river was also designated according to the French appellation: rivière aux Rats Musqués.

The toponym "Rivière Muskrat" was officially registered on August 4, 1969, at the Commission de toponymie du Québec.