See also: chute (def. 1) rapid(s) riffle ((n.)) (def. 1a)
- 1772  (1792)  I went up the river, and visited all the traps; I brought the upper-most one down, and tailed it above the shoot.
- 1792  (1934)  The head of the Island all a rapid with three heavy shoots which cannot be shot in going down but must carry 1/4 mile.
- 1836  (1926)  Formerly, we used to unload at McConnell's, drag the scow up the shoot, load again. . . .
- 1860  By dint of a good deal of enquiry I ascertained that . . . "Bear-shoot" was so named from a bear crossing the river in sight of the crew at another "shoot" below.
2 n. Lumbering, Hist. an artificial sluiceway down which logs or cribs may be directed to avoid rapids, falls, or other obstructions in a river.
See also: slide (def. 1a)
- 1868  More than 20,000,000 cubic feet of timber come down the "shoots" of the Ottawa in this manner each year.