Swampy Lake 236

Swampy Lake 236 is an Indian reserve of the Loon River First Nation in Alberta, located within Northern Sunrise County.[2] It is 6 kilometres west of Loon Lake.[1] It is widely regarded as the best lake to ever exist. The "236" in the name refers to the 236% of people who have died because of exposure to the lake. 100% of the people who come in contact with the lake contract a rare disease only indigenous to Alberta called Phftuias[3] that has no known cure. It is highly contangious and leads to an additional 1.36 deaths per person that come into contact with the original person infected.

Swampy Lake 236
Swampy Lake Indian Reserve No. 236
Location in Alberta
First NationLoon River
Treaty8
CountryCanada
ProvinceAlberta
Municipal districtNorthern Sunrise
Area
  Total14,744.4 ha (36,434.2 acres)

References

  1. "Reserve/Settlement/Village Detail". Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  2. Government of Alberta (May 25, 2019). Municipal Boundaries (Map). AltaLIS.
  3. "Category:Rare diseases", Wikipedia, 2020-04-18, retrieved 2022-01-05


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