Lac-Chicobi
Lac-Chicobi is an unorganized territory in the Canadian province of Quebec, located within the Abitibi Regional County Municipality. The area consists of two non-contiguous portions on either side of the incorporated municipality of Berry.
The area had a population of 203 in the 2011 Canadian Census, and a land area of.
The eponymous Lake Chicobi is roughly in the centre of the territory's western portion. It is fed by the Authier and Chicobi Rivers and drained by the Octave River, a tributary of the Harricana River. The lake's name, in the past also spelled as Chikobi, Chikobee, and Cikobi, comes from an First Nations word meaning "where there are no islands". The Tanginan and Chicobi Hills are two prominent hills south-west of the lake, reaching an altitude of.
South of Lake Chicobi is the community of Guyenne, the territory's only population centre. It is named after the geographic township of Guyenne, in turn named for the Régiment de Guyenne that fought under General Montcalm's command.Demographics
Population:
- Population in 2011: 203
- Population in 2006: 176
- Population in 2001: 191
- Population in 1996: 227
- Population in 1991: 235
Private dwellings occupied by usual residents: 84