The Chilko River is a river in the Chilcotin District of the Central Interior of British Columbia, Canada, flowing northeast from Chilko Lake to the Chilcotin River. Its main tributary is the Taseko River.
The Chilko is the Chilcotin River's main tributary. In fact at their confluence the Chilko River is much larger than the Chilcotin. It is also the main reason why the lower reaches of the Chilcotin are very silty. The Chilko gets most of its silt from the Taseko River, which joins it a few kilometers above the Chilko's mouth.
The name "Chilko" is the product of linguistic anglicisation of the Tà ÂilhqotâÂÂin name Tà Âilhqóx, (also spelled without vowel flattening as Tsilhqox). The meaning of the name is contested, and is the subject of much folk etymologising. Some believe the meaning to be "ochre river", but other contenders are "axe river" (from tà Âinlh yeqox), "river from the ponderosa pine" (from tsilhtsilh yeqox), or "river with rocks" (from tà Âi belh yeqox).
The related name of the Chilcotin River is from that of the Tà ÂilhqotâÂÂin First Nation, from Tà Âilhqox GwetâÂÂin, meaning "people of Tà Âilhqox".
The name Tà Âilhqox refers to the whole Chilko River as well as lower Chilcotin River, with its source at the north end of Chilko Lake and its mouth at its confluence with the Fraser River. Due to a confused naming process, the name "Chilcotin River" refers to only the lower segment of Tà Âilhqox, then follows a smaller tributary (CheáºÂqox/Chezacut River) northwest to Chilcotin Lake (CheáºÂichâÂÂed Biny/Chezacut Lake), and then further north and west along another tributary (Yeqox Gunchagh or "big creek" in Tà ÂilhqotâÂÂin) to its nominal source.