“…This lake, known at different stages as lakes Barlow, Barlow–Ojibway or Ojibway, formed within the isostatically‐depressed landscape between roughly 11·0 and 8·4 ka cal year bp (Vincent & Hardy, ; Veillette, ; Dyke, ; Breckenridge et al ., ; Stroup et al ., ; Roy et al ., ). The succession of lake stages ended when glacial Lake Ojibway, which existed in the area north of the modern Hudson Bay–Ottawa River drainage divide, drained northward into the James and Hudson basins through a breach in or beneath the impounding Laurentide Ice Sheet (Hardy, ; Barber et al ., ; Roy et al ., ; Daubois et al ., ). Modern lakes, such as Duparquet, Dufresnoy and Dasserat, are present within low‐lying areas that were formerly sub‐basins within the large glacial lake.…”