@prefix dbr: .
@prefix rdfs: .
@prefix wm: .
@prefix xsd: .
dbr:Aapsta a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aapsta" ;
wm:abstractText "Aapsta ( Georgian: ააფსთა ) is a river in Abkhazia. It originates on the southern slopes of the Achbikhvdar ridge in the Gudauta pass area in beech forests at 1445 meters above sea level; flows into the Black Sea between the village and the city Gudauta." ;
wm:hasMouth ,
;
wm:hasSource dbr:Gudauta_pass_area ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Abkhazia ;
wm:length 3.5e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "აფსთა" ;
wm:sourceElevation 1.445e+03 .
dbr:Aarons_Creek_\(Dan_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aarons Creek (Dan River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Aarons Creek is a 27.74 mi (44.64 km) long 3rd order tributary to the Dan River in Halifax County, Virginia. Aarons Creek forms the boundary of Halifax and Mecklenburg Counties, Virginia up to the Dan River." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Dan_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Halifax_County,
dbr:Mecklenburg_County ;
wm:length 4.46432e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.144e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Abadi_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abadi Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abadi Creek is a stream located in the U.S. state of California. It is located in Santa Barbara County." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Barbara_County ;
wm:length 1.057339e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.289914e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Abagadasset_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abagadasset River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Abagadasset River is a 16.0-mile-long (25.7 km) tributary of the Kennebec River in Sagadahoc County, Maine. The river starts in Bowdoinham, and ends just south of Gardiner, near the Libby Hill village." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Bowdoinham ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sagadahoc_County ;
wm:length 2.175833e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Abalobadiah_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abalobadiah Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abalobadiah Creek is a stream with its mouth on the coast about a mile above the mouth of Ten Mile River on the Pacific Ocean coast of Mendocino County, California. Its source is at 39°35′21″N 123°44′26″W / 39.58917°N 123.74056°W at an elevation of 800 feet (240 m) in the coastal mountains." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Mendocino_County ;
wm:length 4.699284e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Pacific_Ocean ;
wm:sourceElevation 2.4384e+02 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Abandon_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abandon Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abandon Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Idaho. It is a tributary of Caribou Creek. Abandon Creek was named because of its isolated location." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Caribou_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.876312e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.054913e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Idaho .
dbr:Abasha_\(river\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abasha (river)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Abasha (Georgian: აბაშა, Mingrelian: აბაშა), also known as the Abashistskali (Georgian: აბაშისწყალი) or Abashatskari (Mingrelian: აბაშაწყარი) is a river in western Georgia, running for 66 kilometres (41 mi) in the municipalities of Martvili and Abasha, Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti region. Its catchment area is 370 square kilometres (140 sq mi)." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Georgia ;
wm:inCounty dbr:municipalities_of_Martvili_and_Abasha ;
wm:length 6.6e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Abashistskali;Abashatskari" .
dbr:Abbe_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abbe Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abbe Creek is a stream in Linn County, Iowa, in the United States. Abbe Creek was named for William Abbe, who settled there." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Linn_County ;
wm:length 9.205448e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.161032e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Iowa .
dbr:Abbott_Branch a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abbott Branch" ;
wm:abstractText "Abbott Branch is a stream in northern Iron County, Missouri. It is a tributary of Courtois Creek. The community of Good Water lies on Courtois Creek about 2000 feet north of the confluence and Missouri Route Z crosses the stream about 1000 feet east of the confluence. The headwaters of the stream arise just north of Missouri Route 32 about 1.2 miles (1.9 km) east-southeast of the confluence. Viburnum lies about 4.0 miles (6.4 km) west of the confluence. Abbott Branch has the name of Robert Abbott, an early settler." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:just_north_of_Missouri_Route_32_about_1.2_miles_1.9_km_east-southeast_of_the_confluence ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Iron_County ;
wm:length 6.212068e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.090672e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Abbotts_Creek_\(North_Carolina\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abbotts Creek (North Carolina)" ;
wm:abstractText "Abbotts Creek starts in Kernersville, NC in Forsyth County and becomes High Rock Lake near Lexington, NC in Davidson County just north of Hwy 47. The section of High Rock Lake that is officially Abbotts Creeks ends near the Hwy 8 causeway, in Southmont, NC. The median flow at Lexington ranges from 50 to 200 cubic feet per second. While it only provides a relatively small amount of water that enters the lake, it provides a significant fraction of the total surface area of the lake and hosts a large community of lake front homes, as well as provides significant habitat for fish and wildlife. The upper sections of the lake at Abbotts Creek do not have lake front properties and are considered prime area for sports fishing, particularly largemouth bass and catfish. The lake, up to the high water mark is under the control of Alcoa and is managed under contract granted by the US government." ;
wm:discharge 5e+01 ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Kernersville_NC ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Davidson_County,
dbr:Forsyth_County ;
wm:length 7.314468e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.901952e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Abe_Lord_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abe Lord Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abe Lord Creek is a 2.62 mi (4.22 km) long 1st order tributary to the Delaware River in Delaware County, New York." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Delaware_County ;
wm:length 4.216481e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.569464e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Aberdeen_Creek_\(Drowning_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aberdeen Creek (Drowning Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Aberdeen Creek is a 12.45 mi (20.04 km) long 3rd order tributary to Drowning Creek (Lumber River), in Moore County, North Carolina." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Moore_County ;
wm:length 2.003633e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 8.10768e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Aberjona_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aberjona River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aberjona River is a 9.3-mile-long (15.0 km), heavily urbanized river in the northwestern suburbs of Boston, Massachusetts. The name is from the Natick language and means \"junction or confluence\". The river rises in Reading, flows roughly south through Woburn and Winchester, and empties into the Mystic Lakes. It is generally small and heavily channelized, often running through underground culverts, but is quite apparent in Winchester center where it widens into Judkins Pond and the Mill Pond. The river's 25 square mile watershed covers most of Woburn and about half of Winchester, as well as portions of the surrounding communities of Lexington, Burlington, Wilmington, Reading, Wakefield, and Stoneham. The Aberjona River was first identified by Europeans shortly after 1631, when Captain Edward Johnson explored the area. The name Aberjona appears in the earliest colonial records, but its origins are unknown. By 1865 there were 21 tanneries and currying shops in Woburn, and by the 1870s pollution from tanneries in Woburn and Winchester was affecting both the river and the Upper Mystic Lake (then a public water supply). The Massachusetts Legislature banned the discharge of wastes into Horn Pond Brook (a tributary) in 1907 and into the Aberjona in 1911. A 1995 study by Spliethoff and Hemond analyzed sediments of the Upper Mystic Lake with industrial records, and determined that high concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, and zinc were deposited by chemical and leather industries dating from the early 1900s. In the 1995 bestseller A Civil Action (and 1998 film starring John Travolta), a 15 acres (6.1 ha) parcel of forest, field, and marshland on the banks of the Aberjona River is recalled by witnesses as the place where workers from abutting industrial plants (owned by W.R. Grace & Co. and Beatrice Foods) dumped trichloroethylene (TCE) and other toxic chemicals into trenches, or \"swimming pools\", \"within a few inches of the water.\" At one time, the Aberjona River had \"run clear and full of fish.\" From 1969 into the early 1980s, the Industri-plex site was developed along the river due to its proximity to the I-93 / I-95 junction. Industri-plex manufacturing plants contributed to the area's extensive contamination with chemicals used by the local paper, textile and leather industries, including lead-arsenic insecticides, acetic acid, benzene and toluene, and sulfuric acid. Industri-plex is now a \"superfund\" site, although substantially remediated." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Mystic_Lakes ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Reading ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Horn_Pond_Brook ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.496686e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.1336e+00 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mystic_Lakes ;
wm:traverses dbr:Massachusetts .
dbr:Abiaca_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abiaca Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abiaca Creek is a stream in Carroll, Leflore and Holmes counties in the U.S. state of Mississippi. Abiaca is a name derived from the Choctaw language meaning \"the side of a swamp or creek\". Variant names are \"Abaytche Creek\", \"Abiacha Creek\", \"Abyache Creek\", \"Abyatcch Creek\", \"Abyatchie Creek\", and \"Coila Abiache Creek\"." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Carroll_Leflore_and_Holmes ;
wm:otherNames "Abaytche Creek;Abiacha Creek;Abyache Creek;Abyatcch Creek;Abyatchie Creek;Coila Abiache Creek" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Mississippi .
dbr:Abiqua_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abiqua Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abiqua Creek (/ˈæbɪkwə/ AB-ih-kwə) is a tributary of the Pudding River in the U.S. state of Oregon. The creek originates near Lookout Mountain in the foothills of the Cascade Range in the northwestern part of the state. It flows northwest for about 29 miles (47 km) to its confluence with the Pudding, about 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Silverton, in the Willamette Valley. About 20 miles (32 km) north of Silverton, the Pudding River meets the Molalla River, which meets the Willamette River less than 1 mile (1.6 km) later near Canby. The creek is the main source of drinking water for Silverton, which operates a diversion dam upstream. The city, the Pudding River Watershed Council, and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife are working to improve fish passage on the creek and are studying the effectiveness of the dam's fish ladder. Abiqua Creek has historically supported the largest steelhead spawning populations in the Pudding River watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Lookout_Mountain ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.667098e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.69392e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Pudding_River_Molalla_River_Willamette_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Abrahams_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abrahams Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Abrahams Creek (also known as Abraham Creek, Abraham's Creek, Abram Creek, or Abrams Creek) is a tributary of the Susquehanna River in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 10.7 miles (17.2 km) long and flows through Franklin Township, Dallas Township, Kingston Township, West Wyoming, Wyoming, and Forty Fort. The watershed of the creek has an area of 17.4 square miles (45 km2) and occupies portions of nine municipalities in northeastern Luzerne County. The watershed is divided into the upper Abraham Creek watershed and the lower Abraham Creek watershed, which are joined by a canyon known as The Hollow. The upper part of the watershed is mostly rural, but the lower part is heavily urbanized. The creek's channel has been heavily modified in many places. Its drainage basin is designated as a Coldwater Fishery and a Migratory Fishery. Abrahams Creek is a perennial stream with relatively poor water quality. However, it is not considered to be impaired. Its pH ranges from slightly acidic to slightly alkaline and has a daily sediment load of nearly 14 million pounds (31 million kilograms) per day. The main rock formations in the watershed include the Catskill Formation, the Llewellyn Formation, the Pottsville Group, the Mauch Chunk Formation, and the Pocono Formation. The main soils include the Chenango-Pope-Holly soil, the Lackawanna-Arnot-Morris soil, the Udorthents-Urban Land-Volusia soil, and the Volusia-Mardin-Lordstown soil. Abrahams Creek is named after a historic Mohawk chief known as Tigoransera or \"Little Abraham\". The creek's watershed was historically heavily logged and farmed, and a sediment retention structure was built in the watershed in the 1970s. Numerous bridges have been built over the creek since 1925. The Abrahams Creek Watershed Association operates in the watershed. A 500-million-gallon reservoir known as Frances Slocum Lake was built on the creek in 1965." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Susquehanna_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Luzerne_County ;
wm:length 1.721998e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.591056e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Abraham Creek;Abraham's Creek;Abram Creek;Abrams Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Susquehanna_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Abram_Creek_\(Ohio\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abram Creek (Ohio)" ;
wm:abstractText "Abram Creek, in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, is a tributary of the Rocky River, draining 10.6 square miles in parts of Berea (6.6% of the basin area), Brook Park (31.3%), Cleveland (13.1%), Middleburg Heights (48.8%), and a very small portion of Parma Heights(0.2%). The watershed comprises residential, commercial, light industrial, and natural areas, including significant portions of Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and the NASA Glenn Research Center. A section of the upper creek, including Lake Isaac, Lake Abram, and the Lake-to-Lake Trail are owned and managed by the Cleveland Metroparks. The creek has been transformed extensively by humans, from extensive swamp, to onion-producing cropland, to polluted creek, to its present, mixed state." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Cuyahoga_County ;
wm:length 1.190915e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Rocky_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Ohio .
dbr:Abram_Creek_\(West_Virginia\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abram Creek (West Virginia)" ;
wm:abstractText "Abram Creek is a 19.4-mile-long (31.2 km) tributary stream of the North Branch Potomac River in Grant and Mineral counties in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Grant_and_Mineral_counties ;
wm:length 2.953146e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.09016e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Abrams_Creek_\(Tennessee\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abrams Creek (Tennessee)" ;
wm:abstractText "Abrams Creek is a creek in Blount County, Tennessee. Its headwaters are in Cades Cove, and it is a tributary of the Little Tennessee River. It is named after the Chilhowee Cherokee chief Old Abraham (\"Abram\"). Visitors swim and fish in the creek. The creek was deliberately poisoned in 1957 to kill fish in potential competition with rainbow trout; many fish species were extirpated from the river and have never recovered." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Cades_Cove ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Blount_County ;
wm:length 4.441789e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.663952e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Tennessee .
dbr:Abrams_Creek_\(Virginia\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abrams Creek (Virginia)" ;
wm:abstractText "Abrams Creek is an 11.2-mile-long (18.0 km) tributary stream of Opequon Creek in Frederick County and the independent city of Winchester in Virginia. Abrams Creek rises north of Round Hill and flows in a southeasterly direction through Winchester. From Winchester, Abrams Creek flows east into Opequon Creek. The stream was originally known as Abraham's Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:north_of_Round_Hill ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Frederick_County_and_the_independent_city_of_Winchester ;
wm:length 1.694639e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.53924e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Abraham's Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Abrams_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Abrams Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Abrams Run is a stream in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Abrams Run has the name of Abram Bennett, a pioneer who settled there." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 3.894612e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.270504e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Accokeek_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Accokeek Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Accokeek Creek is a tidal tributary of Potomac Creek, itself a tributary of the Potomac River, in Stafford County, Virginia, United States. From it headwaters to its mouth, Accokeek Creek is 15.4 miles (24.8 km) in total length." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Stafford_County ;
wm:length 2.349642e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Accotink_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Accotink Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Accotink Creek is a 25.0-mile-long (40.2 km) tributary stream of the Potomac River in Fairfax County, Virginia, in the United States. At Springfield, Virginia, Accotink Creek is dammed to create Lake Accotink. The stream empties into the Potomac at Gunston Cove's , to the west of Fort Belvoir." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Potomac_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Fairfax_County ;
wm:length 3.839895e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Acharistsqali a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Acharistsqali" ;
wm:abstractText "Acharistsqali (Georgian: აჭარისწყალი - literal meaning: Adjara's water) is a river of southwestern Georgia. It is a right tributary of the river Çoruh (Chorokhi), which flows into the Black Sea. It is 90 kilometres (56 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 1,540 square kilometres (590 sq mi)." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Çoruh_Chorokhi ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Georgia ;
wm:length 9e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Adjara's water" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Çoruh_Chorokhi .
dbr:Ackerly_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ackerly Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ackerly Creek is a tributary of South Branch Tunkhannock Creek in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 8.7 miles (14.0 km) long and flows through South Abington Township, Waverly Township, Glenburn Township, Dalton, and La Plume Township. The creek has several unnamed tributaries and drains an area of nearly 18 square miles (47 km2). Ackerly Creek is not designated as an impaired waterbody, but it is impacted by some water quality problems. In one reach, the creek flows through Rabbit Hollow, which is set aside as a preserve. The creek experiences some erosion due to its banks being managed and straightened where it flows alongside US Route 6 and US Route 11. The watershed of Ackerly Creek mainly consists of suburban and residential land use, but there are some urbanized areas. It is both the southernmost and most developed part of the watershed of Tunkhannock Creek. There is also a former Superfund site in the creek's watershed. Several historic sites are in the watershed, and a bridge on the Historic American Engineering Record crosses the creek. The watershed of Ackerly Creek is designated as a Coldwater Fishery and a Migratory Fishery and is inhabited by some trout, as of the 1990s. Numerous recreational sites, both public and private, exist within the creek's watershed." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lackawanna_County ;
wm:length 1.400129e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:South_Branch_Tunkhannock_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Ackerman_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ackerman Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ackerman Creek is a stream located in the U.S. state of California. It is located in Mendocino County. Ackerman Creek (Ya-mo bida - wind hole creek) runs through the Pinoleville Reservation in Mendocino County, and is of biocultural significance to the Pomo tribe of Native Americans. Ackerman Creek is central to Pinoleville Pomo cultural subsistence practices, as it is a source of water for the nation's sweat lodge, supports a salmon population, and its native vegetation is used in a variety of cultural practices including basketry. The Pinoleville Pomo Nation currently has restoration efforts underway to remove invasive species, propagate native species including steelhead, and conduct ongoing monitoring of ground water, surface water, vegetation, macroinvertebrates, fish, and birds." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Mendocino_County ;
wm:length 1.850746e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.840992e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Ya-mo bida - wind hole creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Ackerson_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ackerson Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ackerson Creek is a stream in Tuolumne County, California, in the United States. It is a tributary of the South Fork Tuolumne River. Ackerson Creek was named in honor of James F. Ackerson, a figure in the California Gold Rush." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Tuolumne_County ;
wm:length 9.961839e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.302106e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Acorn_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Acorn Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Acorn Creek is a stream in Carroll County in the U.S. state of Georgia, at an elevation of 666 feet (203 m) above mean sea level. It is a tributary to the Chattahoochee River with a discharge rate of 2.74 cfs." ;
wm:discharge 2.74e+00 ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Carroll_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Chattahoochee_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Acushnet_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Acushnet River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Acushnet River is the largest river, 8.6 miles (13.8 km) long, flowing into Buzzards Bay in southeastern Massachusetts, in the United States. The name \"Acushnet\" comes from the Wampanoag or Algonquian word, \"Cushnea\", meaning \"as far as the waters\", a word that was used by the original owners of the land in describing the extent of the parcel they intended to sell to the English settlers from the nearby Plimouth colony. Quite naturally, the English mistook \"Cushnea\" for a fixed placename or the name of a specific river." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Buzzards_Bay ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 1.384032e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Cushnea" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Massachusetts .
dbr:Adair_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adair Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Adair Creek is a stream in western Reynolds County in the Ozarks of southeast Missouri. It is a tributary of Logan Creek. The source area lies just south of the junction of Missouri Route 72 and Missouri Route P about three miles southeast of Bunker. The stream flows south to southeast to its confluence with Logan Creek along Missouri Route B about 3.5 miles southwest of Reynolds. About one mile upstream from its confluence the stream has been blocked with a dam and filled by mine tailings from the Adair Creek Mine (Sweetwater Mine). Adair Creek has the name of one Mr. Adair, a local judge." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:just_south_of_the_junction_of_Missouri_Route_72_and_Missouri_Route_P_about_three_miles_southeast_of_Bunker ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Reynolds_County ;
wm:length 9.237635e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.91084e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Adams_Branch a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adams Branch" ;
wm:abstractText "Adams Branch is a stream in Cass County, Missouri. It is a tributary of the South Grand River. Adams Branch was named after William Adams, a pioneer citizen." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Cass_County ;
wm:length 8.384682e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.459736e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Adams_Branch_\(Richardson_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adams Branch (Richardson Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Adams Branch is a 4.64 mi (7.47 km) tributary of Richardson Creek in south-central North Carolina that rises in Union County near Alton, North Carolina and then flows generally north through Union County to Richardson Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Union_County_near_Alton_North_Carolina ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Union_County ;
wm:length 7.467356e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.609344e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Adams_Creek_\(Dutch_Buffalo_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adams Creek (Dutch Buffalo Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Adams Creek is a 8.88 mi (14.29 km) long 2nd order tributary to Dutch Buffalo Creek in Cabarrus County, North Carolina." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Cabarrus_County ;
wm:length 1.429097e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.56972e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Adams_Hollow_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adams Hollow Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Adams Hollow Creek is a short tributary of the Delaware River meeting with it just upstream from Mill Creek in Bristol, Bucks County, Pennsylvania." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Delaware_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Bucks_County ;
wm:length 2.01168e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Addis_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Addis Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Addis Run is a tributary stream of the Hughes River in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Addis Run has the name of a local landowner. This is the only stream of this name in the United States." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Hughes_River ;
wm:inCountry ;
wm:length 7.563917e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.020824e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Addison_Creek_\(Salt_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Addison Creek (Salt Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Addison Creek is a 10.7-mile-long (17.2 km) stream in the northeastern portion of the U.S. state of Illinois. It is a tributary of Salt Creek. Addison Creek originates in Bensenville and runs south and east through Northlake, Stone Park, Maywood, Bellwood, and Westchester. Water from the creek flows via Salt Creek, the Des Plaines River, and the Illinois River to the Mississippi River and ultimately the Gulf of Mexico." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Bensenville ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.721998e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.871472e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Salt_Creek_Des_Plaines_River_Illinois_River_Mississippi_River_Gulf_of_Mexico ;
wm:traverses dbr:Illinois .
dbr:Addition_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Addition Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Addition Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Montana. It is a tributary to South Fork Flathead River. According to tradition, Addition Creek was named in celebration of the wedding of forestry official Donald Bruce (namesake to Bruce Creek)." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 9.302008e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.101547e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Montana .
dbr:Adobe_Creek_\(Santa_Clara_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adobe Creek (Santa Clara County)" ;
wm:abstractText "Adobe Creek, historically San Antonio Creek, is a 14.2-mile-long (22.9 km) northward-flowing stream originating on Black Mountain in the Santa Cruz Mountains. It courses through the cities of Los Altos Hills, Los Altos, and Palo Alto on its way to the Palo Alto Flood Basin and thence to southwestern San Francisco Bay in Santa Clara County, California, United States. Historically, Adobe Creek was a perennial stream and hosted runs of steelhead trout entering from the Bay, but these salmonids are now blocked by numerous flood control structures, including a tidal gate at the creek's mouth and a long concretized rectangular channel culminating in an impassable drop structure at El Camino Real. The co-founders of Adobe Systems both lived on Adobe Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Black_Mountain ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Clara_County ;
wm:length 2.285263e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "San Antonio Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:San_Francisco_Bay ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adobe Creek (Sonoma County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Adobe Creek is a southward-flowing stream in Sonoma County, California, United States, which flows past the historic Rancho Petaluma Adobe on the creek's 7.5-mile (12.1 km) course to its confluence with the Petaluma River. It has also been called Casa Grande Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sonoma_County ;
wm:length 1.207005e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.144e-01 ;
wm:otherNames "Casa Grande Creek" ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Adventure_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Adventure Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Adventure Creek is a stream in North Slope Borough, Alaska, in the United States. It is a tributary of the Utukok River. Adventure Creek was named in 1925 when a group of surveyors became lost at the creek." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Utukok_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:North_Slope_Borough ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Aeneas_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aeneas Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aeneas Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Montana. It is a tributary to Graves Creek. Aeneas Creek was named after a Flathead chieftain." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 7.225955e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.125931e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Montana .
dbr:Afton_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Afton Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Afton Run is a 6.13 mi (9.87 km) long 1st order tributary to Coddle Creek in Cabarrus County, North Carolina. This is the only stream of this name in the United States." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Cabarrus_County ;
wm:length 9.865279e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.795272e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Agee_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agee Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Agee Creek is a stream in Butler County, Missouri, USA. Agee Creek was named after William Agee, a pioneer citizen." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:USA ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Butler_County ;
wm:length 4.103827e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.039368e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Agency_Creek_\(Idaho\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agency Creek (Idaho)" ;
wm:abstractText "Agency Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Idaho. It is a tributary of the Lemhi River. Agency Creek was named for an Indian agency near its course." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.882932e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.471879e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Idaho .
dbr:Agency_Creek_\(South_Yamhill_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agency Creek (South Yamhill River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Agency Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Oregon, located in Yamhill County. Agency Creek is a tributary to the South Yamhill River." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Yamhill_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:South_Yamhill_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Agiapuk_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agiapuk River" ;
wm:abstractText "Agiapuk River (also Agee-ee-puk, Ageepuk, Agiopuk, Ahgeeapuk) is a waterway on the Seward Peninsula in the U.S. state of Alaska. It is a tributary to Grantley Harbor from the north. American River is a main tributary." ;
wm:hasMouth ,
;
wm:hasTributary dbr:American_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 9.656064e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.1336e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "Agee-ee-puk;Ageepuk;Agiopuk;Ahgeeapuk" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Agricultural_Ditch_\(Dirickson_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agricultural Ditch (Dirickson Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Agricultural Ditch is a 3.93 mi (6.32 km) long 2nd order tributary to Dirickson Creek, in Sussex County, Delaware." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sussex_County ;
wm:length 6.324722e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Little_Assawoman_Bay ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Agua_Chinon_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agua Chinon Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Agua Chinon Creek or Agua Chinon Wash is an urban stream in the city of Irvine, Orange County, California. The creek flows southwest from its headwaters in the foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains for about 8 miles (13 km) to join San Diego Creek near the Verizon Amphitheatre. The creek drains a total watershed area of 7,049 acres (2,853 ha). The headwaters of the creek consist of approximately 1,200 acres (490 ha) of undeveloped canyonlands in the Limestone Canyon Nature Preserve. The area includes the badlands known as The Sinks, which are nicknamed \"the Grand Canyon of Orange County\" due to its sheer cliffs. At the bottom of the canyons Agua Chinon Creek flows under State Route 241 and is impounded by the Agua Chinon Debris Dam, which provides flood control to the valley below. Completed in 1998, the dam has a capacity of 256 acre-feet (316,000 m3) of water. The middle section of Agua Chinon Creek flows through a culvert underneath the former El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. The redevelopment of the air base as Orange County Great Park includes plans to daylight the creek and restore streambank habitat. This work is proposed to create a wildlife corridor between the Cleveland National Forest and the Laguna Coast wilderness area (Crystal Cove State Park). Below the Air Base/Great Park the creek continues in a buried channel under the BNSF Railway tracks, Interstate 5 and the Irvine Spectrum Center, and is joined from the left by its main tributary, Borrego Canyon Wash. It emerges as an open channel just a few hundred feet before its confluence with San Diego Creek. The confluence is situated just north of the Interstate 405 near the 405/133 interchange." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:foothills_of_the_Santa_Ana_Mountains ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Borrego_Canyon_Wash ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Orange_County ;
wm:length 1.281038e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.09016e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Agua Chinon Wash" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:San_Diego_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Agua_Fria_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agua Fria River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Agua Fria River (Spanish for \"cold water\") is a 120-mile (190 km) long intermittent stream which flows generally south from 20 miles (32 km) east-northeast of Prescott in the U.S. state of Arizona. Prescott draws much of its municipal water supply from the upper Agua Fria watershed. The Agua Fria runs through the Agua Fria National Monument. The river then flows through a small canyon called \"Black Canyon\" into Lake Pleasant, a popular recreation area near Peoria, Arizona.(There is a large \"Black Canyon\" on the Colorado River along the Arizona–Nevada border.) During rainy weather and at times when water is flowing in the intermittent Agua Fria River, it discharges into the Gila River, which also only flows during wet periods of the year. The Central Arizona Water Conservation District of the Central Arizona Project operates the Agua Fria Recharge Project, which is about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of the New Waddell Dam. It serves to recharge underground aquifers in this area, and ends at Lake Pleasant, Phoenix." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:20_miles_32_km_east-northeast_of_Prescott ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.068168e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.779776e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Agua Fria" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arizona .
dbr:Agua_Sal_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Agua Sal Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Agua Sal Creek is a stream located in the Chinle Valley of Apache County, Arizona. \"Agua Sal\" is a name derived from Spanish meaning \"salt water\"." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Apache_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.645006e+03 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arizona .
dbr:Aguaje_Canyon a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aguaje Canyon" ;
wm:abstractText "Aguaje Canyon is a canyon stream in Las Animas County, Colorado, United States. Its mouth is located at an elevation of 5,351 feet (1,631 m). Its source is at an elevation of 5,445 feet (1,660 m) at 37°13′20″N 103°44′23″W / 37.22222°N 103.73972°W. A spring, or aguaje, is found at its head from which flows as a tributary stream into the at its canyon mouth, in , which is a tributary of the Purgatoire River." ;
wm:hasSource ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Las_Animas_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.524e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "aguaje" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:sourceElevation 1.524e+00 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Colorado .
dbr:Ah_Pah_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ah Pah Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ah Pah Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of California. The 5.25-mile (8.45 km) long stream is a tributary to the Klamath River. \"Ah Pah\" is a name derived from the Yurok language." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 8.449056e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Klamath_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Ahmik_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ahmik River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ahmik River is a 5.2-mile-long (8.4 km) tributary of the Saint Louis River of Minnesota, United States." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 8.368589e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.709416e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Saint_Louis_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Minnesota .
dbr:Ahnapee_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ahnapee River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ahnapee River is a 14.7-mile-long (23.7 km) river on the Door Peninsula in eastern Wisconsin in the United States. It rises in Door County, Wisconsin, and flows through Kewaunee County into Lake Michigan at the city of Algoma. Its name has been ascribed as coming from the Ojibwe word aanapii meaning \"when?\"." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Door_County_Wisconsin ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Door_County_Kewaunee_County ;
wm:length 2.414016e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Lake_Michigan ;
wm:traverses dbr:Wisconsin .
dbr:Ahtanum_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ahtanum Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ahtanum Creek is a tributary of the Yakima River in the U.S. state of Washington. It starts at the confluence of the Middle and North Forks of Ahtanum Creek near Tampico, flows along the north base of Ahtanum Ridge, ends at the Yakima River near Union Gap and forms a portion of the northern boundary of the Yakama Indian Reservation. The name Ahtanum originates from the Sahaptin language, which was spoken by Native Americans in the region. The North Fork enters the Middle Fork just upstream from its confluence with the South Fork. These three forks have sources in the Cascade Mountains. The creek has had several different official names since Europeans settled the region, all of which have been variant spellings of Ahtanum. The current spelling has been in place since 1916. Seasonal flooding associated with snow melting in the spring is common." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Cascade_Mountains ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.8956e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Yakima_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Washington .
dbr:Aichilik_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aichilik River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aichilik River is a river that flows through parts of North Slope Borough in the U.S. state of Alaska. it originates on the northern flank of the Brooks Range and flows north, then northwest to empty into the Beaufort Sea northwest of Demarcation Point. Its Inuit name, Aichillik was referenced by Ernest de Koven Leffingwell in 1918." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Beaufort_Sea ;
wm:hasSource dbr:northern_flank_of_the_Brooks_Range ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:North_Slope_Borough ;
wm:otherNames "Aichillik" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Akulik_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Akulik Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Akulik Creek is a stream in North Slope Borough, Alaska, in the United States. It flows to the Chukchi Sea. Akulik is derived from an Eskimo word meaning \"fancy trimming\"." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Chukchi_Sea ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:North_Slope_Borough ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Al_Fisher_Brook a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Al Fisher Brook" ;
wm:abstractText "Al Fisher Brook is a river in Delaware County, New York. It flows into Cadosia Creek north of Cadosia." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Delaware_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.23088e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Cadosia_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Alabaha_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alabaha River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alabaha River is a 20.6-mile-long (33.2 km) tributary of the Satilla River in the U.S. state of Georgia. It forms in northwestern Pierce County at the junction of Hurricane Creek and Little Hurricane Creek and flows southeast, past the county seat of Blackshear, and joins the Satilla River at the Pierce County/Brantley County boundary." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Satilla_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:northwestern_Pierce_County ;
wm:inCountry ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Pierce_County ;
wm:length 3.31524e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Satilla_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Alafia_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alafia River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alafia River is 25 miles (40 km) long, with a watershed of 335 square miles (870 km2) in Hillsborough County, Florida, United States, flowing into Tampa Bay. The watershed contains ten named lakes and ponds, and 29 named rivers, streams and canals. During the rainy season, excess water is pumped to the new C.W. Bill Young Regional Reservoir, which opened in 2005. The river is formed by two prongs. The north prong starts south of Mulberry and runs for 23.9 miles until it meets the south prong in Lithia. The south prong begins south of Bradley Junction and continues for 28.7 miles. The combined river then flows 24.7 miles west into Tampa Bay." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:south_of_Mulberry_north_prong_south_of_Bradley_Junction_south_prong ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Hillsborough_County ;
wm:length 7.803709e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Florida .
dbr:Alagnak_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alagnak River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alagnak River is a 64-mile (103 km) tributary of the Kvichak River in the U.S. state of Alaska. It has a catchment area of approximately 1400 square mi (3600 km2). It is located in central Lake and Peninsula Borough." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lake_and_Peninsula_Borough ;
wm:length 1.02998e+05 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Kvichak_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Alambique_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alambique Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alambique Creek, or Arroyo Alembique, is a 2.7-mile-long (4.3 km) stream located in San Mateo County, California in the United States. It is part of the San Francisquito Creek watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:San_Mateo_County ;
wm:length 4.345218e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.130808e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Arroyo Alembique" ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alamito_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alamito Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alamito Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Texas. It is a tributary of the Rio Grande, which is joins near Presidio, Texas." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Rio_Grande ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Alamitos_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alamitos Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alamitos Creek or Los Alamitos Creek is a 7.7-mile-long (12.4 km) creek in San Jose, California, which becomes the Guadalupe River when it exits Lake Almaden and joins Guadalupe Creek. Los Alamitos Creek is located in Almaden Valley and originates from the Los Capitancillos Ridge in the Santa Cruz Mountains, near New Almaden. This creek flows through the Valley's Guadalupe Watershed, which is owned by the Santa Clara Valley Water District. The creek flows in a generally northwesterly direction after rounding the Los Capitancillos Ridge and the town of New Almaden, in the southwest corner, before ambling along the Santa Teresa Hills on northeast side of the Almaden Valley. Its environment has some relatively undisturbed areas and considerable lengths of suburban residential character. Originally called Arroyo de los Alamitos, the creek's name is derived from \"little poplar\", \"alamo\" being the Spanish word for \"poplar\" or \"cottonwood\"." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_New_Almaden ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.239192e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.91312e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Los Alamitos Creek;Arroyo de los Alamitos" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Guadalupe_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alamo_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alamo River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alamo River (Spanish: Río Álamo) flows west and north from the Mexicali Valley (Baja California) across the Imperial Valley (California). The 52-mile-long (84 km) river drains into the Salton Sea. The New River, Alamo River, and the Salton Sea of the 21st century started in autumn 1904, when the Colorado River, swollen by seasonal rainfall and snow-melt, flowed through a series of three human-engineered openings in the recently constructed levee bank of the Alamo Canal. The resulting flood poured down the canal and breached an Imperial Valley dike. The sudden influx of water and the lack of any drainage from the basin resulted in the formation of the Salton Sea; the rivers had re-created a great inland sea in an area that it had frequently inundated before, the Salton Sink. It took slightly less than two years (Mar 1905 to Feb 10, 1907) to control the Colorado River’s inflow to the Alamo Canal and stop the uncontrolled flooding of the Salton Sink, but the canal was effectively channelized with operational headgates by the early part of 1907. The Alamo and New Rivers continued to flow, but at a lesser rate. The river was named after the Spanish name for the Fremont cottonwood that grows in the region. In most places, the river is a vegetation-choked ravine with a small watercourse at the bottom. The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment has issued a safe eating advisory based on mercury, DDTs, PCBs, and selenium." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Mexicali_Valley ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Imperial_Valley ;
wm:length 8.368589e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 6.6e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Río Álamo" ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alamosa_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alamosa Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alamosa Creek, also known as Alamosa Arroyo and Alamosa River, is a tributary stream of the Rio Grande in Socorro and Sierra County, New Mexico. Alamosa Creek has its source at 33°49′13″N 107°38′43″W / 33.82028°N 107.64528°W at an elevation of 7600 ft / 2,316 meters on the western slope of the San Mateo Mountains in Soccoro. Its mouth was originally at its confluence with the Rio Grande, before that river was flooded by the Elephant Butte Reservoir created by the Elephant Butte Dam. Its mouth is now on the western edge of that reservoir at the mouth of Monticello Canyon." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:confluence_with_the_Rio_Grande ;
wm:hasSource ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Socorro_and_Sierra_County ;
wm:otherNames "Alamosa Arroyo;Alamosa River" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:sourceElevation 2.31648e+03 ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Mexico .
dbr:Alamosa_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alamosa River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alamosa River is a river in the southern part of the U.S. state of Colorado. It is about 64 miles (103 km) long, flowing roughly east through the San Luis Valley. Its watershed comprises about 148 square miles (380 km2). The river's name means \"shaded with cottonwoods\" in Spanish. The river was affected by the Summitville mine disaster, the worst cyanide spill in United States history." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.02998e+05 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Colorado .
dbr:Alampa_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alampa Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alampa Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Mississippi. It is a tributary to Pinishook Creek. Alampa most likely is a name derived from the Choctaw language meaning \"hiding places\"." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 6.533937e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.359408e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Mississippi .
dbr:Alapahoochee_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alapahoochee River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alapahoochee River is a 14.4-mile-long (23.2 km) tributary of the Alapaha River in Georgia and Florida in the United States. Via the Alapaha and Suwannee rivers, its waters flow to the Gulf of Mexico. The river rises on the boundary between Lowndes and Echols counties at the confluence of Grand Bay Creek and Mud Creek, about 10 miles (16 km) southeast of Valdosta. The river flows southeast through Echols County, crossing into Hamilton County, Florida, around 2 miles (3 km) above its confluence with the Alapaha River near the town of Jennings. Other names: Little River, Little Alapaha and Grand Bay Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Alapaha_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:boundary_between_Lowndes_and_Echols_counties_at_the_confluence_of_Grand_Bay_Creek_and_Mud_Creek_about_10_miles_16_km_southeast_of_Valdosta ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Echols_County,
dbr:Hamilton_County,
dbr:Lowndes_County ;
wm:length 2.317455e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Little River;Little Alapaha;Grand Bay Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Alapaha_River_Suwannee_River_Gulf_of_Mexico ;
wm:traverses dbr:Florida,
dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Alapocas_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alapocas Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Alapocas Run is a 1.05 mi (1.69 km) long tributary to Brandywine Creek in New Castle County, Delaware. This run drains a large portion of Alapocas Run State Park in the Wilmington, Delaware area." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:New_Castle_County ;
wm:length 1.689811e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.2192e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Albertson_Brook a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Albertson Brook" ;
wm:abstractText "Albertson Brook, also called Albertsons Brook, is the name of Nescochague Creek upstream of the confluence with Great Swamp Brook in the southern New Jersey Pine Barrens in the United States. Albertson Brook is near Hammonton, New Jersey, and flows for 6.3 miles (10.1 km) through Atlantic and Camden counties. It has a drainage area of 17.1 square miles (44 km2), of which nearly half is forest land, and the rest is split between urban and agricultural uses, both of which have tended to pollute the brook in the past. It is formed by the confluence of the Pump Branch and ." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Atlantic_and_Camden_counties ;
wm:length 9.334195e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.00584e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Albertsons Brook" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Jersey .
dbr:Albion_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Albion River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Albion River is an 18.1-mile-long (29.1 km) river in Mendocino County, California. The river drains about 43 square miles (110 km2) on the Mendocino Coast and empties into the Pacific Ocean near the town of Albion, California, where California State Route 1 crosses it on the Albion River Bridge. The river's overall direction is east to west, but it moves significantly in the north-south direction. The tributaries of the river include Railroad Gulch, Pleasant Valley Creek, Duck Pond Gulch, South Fork Albion River, Tom Bell Creek, North Fork Albion River, and Marsh Creek. The river's most inland point is only 15 miles (24 km) from the coast, and its highest elevation is about 1,570 feet (480 m) above sea level. There is a large estuary at the mouth of the river, and tidal waters travel up to 5 miles (8 km) upstream. The Albion River was previously used to power a sawmill on the river mouth, but there are no major dams or reservoirs on the river. The river provides recreation, groundwater recharge and industrial water supply for the community of Albion, and wildlife habitat including cold freshwater habitat for fish migration and spawning." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Mendocino_County ;
wm:length 2.912905e+04 ;
wm:sourceElevation 3.048e-01 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alco_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alco Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alco Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is a tributary to Elk Creek. Alco Creek was named after William Alcoe, a pioneer citizen." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 3.894612e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.041392e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Alcovy_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alcovy River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alcovy River (pronunciation: al-CO-vee) is a 69-mile-long (111 km) tributary of the Ocmulgee River in north-central Georgia in the United States. It is part of the watershed of the Altamaha River, which flows to the Atlantic Ocean." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Ocmulgee_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 1.110445e+05 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Altamaha_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Alder_Brook a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Brook" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Brook flows into the Middle Branch Grass River near Degrasse, New York." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.7432e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Middle_Branch_Grass_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Alder_Brook_\(West_Branch_French_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Brook (West Branch French Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Brook is a 2.93 mi (4.72 km) long tributary to West Branch French Creek that is classed as a 1st order stream on the EPA waters geoviewer site." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.715378e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.959352e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem .
dbr:Alder_Creek_\(Beaver_Kill_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Creek (Beaver Kill tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Creek flows into Beaver Kill by Turnwood, New York." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Beaver_Kill .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Creek (Los Angeles County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Creek is an approximately 4.25-mile (6.84 km) long tributary of Big Tujunga Creek in Los Angeles County, California and the Angeles National Forest. It is formed by the confluence of the West Fork and North Fork Alder Creek in the San Gabriel Mountains a short distance south of Pacifico Mountain. It then flows south, picking up the Middle Fork, East Fork and Mule Fork before emptying into Big Tujunga Creek 5 miles (8.0 km) east of Hidden Springs. Near its mouth the creek flows under a bridge carrying Upper Big Tujunga Canyon Road." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Los_Angeles_County ;
wm:length 6.839712e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.035101e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Big_Tujunga_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Creek (Mariposa County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Creek is a stream in Mariposa County, California, in the United States. It is a tributary of the South Fork Merced River. Alder Creek was likely named after Alnus rhombifolia, also known as alder." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Mariposa_County ;
wm:length 1.046074e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.053694e+03 ;
wm:otherNames "alder" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Creek (Nevada County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Creek is a perennial stream in Nevada County, California, mostly within the town of Truckee. Its source region near is west of town, and its mouth at Prosser Creek Reservoir is north of town. It flows to the Truckee River via Prosser Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:west_of_town ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Nevada_County ;
wm:length 1.430707e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.749857e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Creek (Saguache County, Colorado)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Creek is a stream entirely within Saguache County, Colorado. Alder Creek was named for the alder trees lining its course." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Saguache_County ;
wm:length 8.143281e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.57495e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Colorado .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder Creek (Siskiyou County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alder Creek is a river located in Siskiyou County, California." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Siskiyou_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alder_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alder River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alder River is a 6.3-mile-long (10.1 km) river in Maine. A tributary of the Androscoggin River, the Alder flows west from Locke Mills (44°24′00″N 070°42′13″W / 44.40000°N 70.70361°W) to Bethel." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Bethel ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Locke_Mills ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.013887e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.95072e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Androscoggin_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Alex_Creek_\(Altamaha_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alex Creek (Altamaha River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alex Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Georgia. It is a tributary to the Altamaha River. A variant name is \"Alecks Creek\". Alex Creek was named after \"Captain\" Alleck, a Lower Creek chieftain." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.187696e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.9624e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "Alecks Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Alexander_Creek_\(Susitna_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alexander Creek (Susitna River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alexander Creek, also known as Taguntna Creek, is a 35 miles (56 km) long stream from Alexander Lake which merges with the big Susitna River near the village of Alexander Creek, Alaska also known as Alexander, Alaska, an Alaska Native and Alaska Bush community, in Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Susitna_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Alexander_Lake ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Matanuska-Susitna_Borough ;
wm:length 5.632704e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 7.9248e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "Taguntna Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Susitna_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Alexanders_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alexanders Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Alexanders Run is a 3.69 mi (5.94 km) long 1st order tributary to Harmon Creek in Brooke County, West Virginia. This is the only stream of this names in the United States." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Brooke_County ;
wm:length 5.938479e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.359152e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Alger_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alger Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alger Creek is a stream in Mono County, California, in the United States. Alger Creek took its name from Alger Lakes." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Mono_County ;
wm:length 7.563917e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.204009e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Algeti a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Algeti" ;
wm:abstractText "The Algeti (Georgian: ალგეთი) is a river in Kvemo Kartli, Georgia, spanning the municipalities of Tetritsqaro and Marneuli. It is 118 km (73 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 763 km2 (295 sq mi). Originating at Mount Kldekari, it flows into the deep rocky valley and then a plain before joining the river Kura as its right tributary. Colorful landscapes of the Algeti valley are protected as the Algeti National Park." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Kura ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Georgia ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Tetritsqaro_and_Marneuli ;
wm:length 1.18e+05 ;
wm:otherNames "ალგეთი" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Kura .
dbr:Alhambra_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alhambra Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alhambra Creek is a stream in Contra Costa County, in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area in northern California." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Contra_Costa_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 6.18744e+01 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alidade_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alidade Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alidade Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Idaho. It is a tributary of Johnson Creek. Alidade Creek was named after the alidade, a surveying instrument." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.832445e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.018995e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Idaho .
dbr:Aline_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aline Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aline Creek is a tributary of North Branch Mahantango Creek in Snyder County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 2.3 miles (3.7 km) long and flows through Perry Township. The watershed of the creek has an area of 1.61 square miles (4.2 km2). The creek has no named tributaries, but does have one unnamed tributary. A reach of Aline Creek is designated as an impaired waterbody due to siltation/sedimentation from agriculture and removal of vegetation. The creek's drainage basin is designated as a Coldwater Fishery and a Migratory Fishery." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:North_Branch_Mahantango_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Snyder_County ;
wm:length 3.701491e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.411224e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:North_Branch_Mahantango_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Aliso_Creek_\(Los_Angeles_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aliso Creek (Los Angeles County)" ;
wm:abstractText "Aliso Creek (also Aliso Canyon Wash or Aliso Wash) is a major tributary of the Upper Los Angeles River in the Santa Susana Mountains in Los Angeles County and western San Fernando Valley in the City of Los Angeles, California. It has a watershed of 21 square miles (54 km2). It is the second major tributary, after Browns Canyon Wash−Creek, to enter the Los Angeles River downstream of its headwaters at the confluence of Bell Creek and Arroyo Calabasas in Canoga Park." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Upper_Los_Angeles_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Santa_Susana_Mountains ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Los_Angeles_County ;
wm:otherNames "Aliso Canyon Wash;Aliso Wash" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Aliso_Creek_\(Orange_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aliso Creek (Orange County)" ;
wm:abstractText "Aliso Creek is a 19.8-mile (31.9 km)-long, mostly urban stream in south Orange County, California. Originating in the Cleveland National Forest in the Santa Ana Mountains, it flows generally southwest and empties into the Pacific Ocean at Laguna Beach. The creek's watershed drains 34.9 square miles (90 km2), and it is joined by seven main tributaries. As of 2018, the watershed had a population of 144,000 divided among seven incorporated cities. Aliso Creek flows over highly erosive marine sedimentary rock of late Eocene to Pliocene age. What would become the Aliso Creek watershed originally lay at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, before being uplifted as recently as 10 million years ago. About 1.2 million years ago, the San Joaquin Hills began to uplift in the path of Aliso Creek. Occasionally swollen by wetter climates during glacial periods, the creek carved the deep water gap known today as Aliso Canyon, the main feature of Aliso and Wood Canyons Wilderness Park. Historically, Aliso Creek served as the boundary between the Acjachemem (Juaneño) and Tongva (Gabrieleño) Native Americans. Spanish explorers and missionaries reached the area in the 1700s and established Mission San Juan Capistrano, whose lands included part of the Aliso Creek watershed. In the 1840s the watershed was divided between several Mexican land grants. After California became part of the United States, the ranchos were gradually partitioned and sold off to farmers and settlers; starting in the 1950s, real estate companies acquired most of the land for development. By the 21st century, more than 70 percent of the Aliso Creek watershed was urbanized. Most of the creek's course has been channelized or otherwise impacted by development. Pollution and erosion from urban runoff have become chronic issues. However, parts of the creek remain free flowing and provide important regional wildlife habitat, especially in the Aliso Canyon section. The creek has recently been the focus of projects to restore the stream channel and improve water quality." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Pacific_Ocean ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Cleveland_National_Forest ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Orange_County ;
wm:length 3.186493e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Allabands_Mill_Stream_\(Isaac_Branch_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allabands Mill Stream (Isaac Branch tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Allabands Mill Stream is a 1.80 mi (2.90 km) long 1st order tributary to Isaac Branch in Kent County, Delaware." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Kent_County ;
wm:length 2.896819e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.18872e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Allagash_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allagash River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Allagash River is a tributary of the Saint John River, approximately 65 miles (105 km) long, in northern Maine in the United States. It drains in a remote and scenic area of wilderness in the Maine North Woods north of Mount Katahdin. The name \"Allagash\" comes from the Abenaki language, a dialect of the Algonquin languages, spoken by the Penobscot Tribe. The word, /walakéskʸihtəkʸ/, means \"bark stream\". The Allagash issues from Churchill Lake (formerly known as Heron Lake) at Churchill Depot in northern Piscataquis County. In its natural state, it also drained Allagash, Chamberlain, and Telos lakes, but in the 1840s dams were built which diverted their drainage into the East Branch of the Penobscot River, to facilitate the shipping of logs south to coastal Maine. Lock Dam drains some water from Chamberlain Lake into the south end of Eagle Lake, which then flows out through the Allagash as it naturally would. Extending the flowline of the Allagash River to Lock Dam on Chamberlain Lake gives a total length to the mouth of the Allagash at the Saint John River of 86 miles (138 km). The Allagash flows generally northeast, passing through a chain of natural mountain lakes. It joins the Saint John from the south at Allagash, Maine, near the international border with New Brunswick. The relatively unspoiled nature of the river has long made it a popular destination for canoe trips. In 1857 Henry David Thoreau, along with his Concord friend and Penobscot guide , made a canoe journey which led him to the source of the river, i.e. Heron Lake. His account of the excursion called \"The Allegash and East Branch\" was published posthumously as the third chapter of (1864). In 1966, the citizens of Maine voted to protect the river by authorizing a $1.5 million bond that would \"develop the maximum wilderness character\" of the river. Much of the river was subsequently designated as the Allagash Wilderness Waterway. In 1970 the waterway became part of the National Wild and Scenic River program of the U.S. federal government. Although the wild designation of the river is normally applied to free-flowing streams, the designation left in place the wooden Churchill Dam for historic reasons. In the 1990s, with the dam failing, the citizens of Maine authorized a concrete replacement for the dam to preserve the nearby recreational facilities on the river. The rebuilding of the dam was highly criticized by environmentalists. The expansion of recreational access to the river through new roads and docks has remained a controversial topic in recent years. Development in much of the area surrounding the Allagash Wilderness Waterway is restricted by the Seven Islands Land Company, a private land management company that owns approximately 1 million acres (4,000 km²) of forest in northern Maine. The United States government maintains one stream gauge on the Allagash, located 3 miles (4.8 km) above the river's mouth near Allagash, Maine (47°04′14″N 69°04′51″W / 47.07056°N 69.08083°W), at which point the watershed is 1,479 square miles (3,830 km2). The river's discharge (flow) at this gauge averages 1,967 cubic feet per second (55.7 m3/s), with a recorded maximum of 40,900 cubic feet per second (1,160 m3/s) and minimum of 87 cubic feet per second (2.5 m3/s). Annual maximum flows occur during the spring snow melt and minimums in the fall." ;
wm:discharge 1e+00 ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Churchill_Lake_formerly_known_as_Heron_Lake_at_Churchill_Depot ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Piscataquis_County ;
wm:length 1.046074e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.801368e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Saint_John_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Allegheny_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allegheny Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Allegheny Creek is an 11.3-mile-long (18.2 km) tributary of the Schuylkill River in Berks County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Allegheny Creek joins the Schuylkill River at the village of Gibraltar. It is crossed by the Allegheny Aqueduct, built as part of the Schuylkill Canal in 1824." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Berks_County ;
wm:length 1.744529e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.69392e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Allen_Branch_\(Doe_Run_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allen Branch (Doe Run Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Allen Branch is a stream in St. Francois County, Missouri. It is a tributary of Doe Run Creek. Allen Branch has the name of the original owner of the site." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:St._Francois_County ;
wm:length 6.904086e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.639568e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Allen_Branch_\(Fourche_a_Renault_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allen Branch (Fourche a Renault tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Allen Branch is a stream in Washington County, Missouri. It is a tributary of Fourche a Renault. Allen Branch has the name of John Allen, the original owner of the site." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Washington_County ;
wm:length 5.069434e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.5908e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Allen_Branch_\(Troublesome_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allen Branch (Troublesome Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Allen Branch is a stream in Lewis County, Missouri. It is a tributary of Troublesome Creek. Allen Branch has the name of N. E. Allen, the original owner of the site." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lewis_County ;
wm:length 9.092794e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.810512e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Allen_Creek_\(Banister_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allen Creek (Banister River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Allen Creek is a 5.47 mi (8.80 km) long 3rd order tributary to the Banister River in Pittsylvania County, Virginia." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Pittsylvania_County ;
wm:length 8.803112e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.197864e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Allen_Pond_Outlet a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allen Pond Outlet" ;
wm:abstractText "Allen Pond Outlet flows into the South Branch Grass River near ." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.121152e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:South_Branch_Grass_River .
dbr:Alligator_Creek_\(Little_Ocmulgee_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alligator Creek (Little Ocmulgee River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alligator Creek is a 48.6-mile-long (78.2 km) tributary of the Little Ocmulgee River in the U.S. state of Georgia. Alligator Creek was named after the American alligator." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 7.821392e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Little_Ocmulgee_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Alligator_River_\(North_Carolina\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alligator River (North Carolina)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alligator River is a small river in eastern North Carolina, separating Dare County and Tyrrell County. It empties into Albemarle Sound. A 21-mile canal connects the Alligator River with Pungo River to its west. The Lindsey C. Warren Bridge of U.S. Route 64 crosses the river. Alligator River is protected as part of Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge. Habitat bordering the Refuge includes many diverse types including high and low pocosin, bogs, fresh and brackish water marshes, hardwood swamps, and Atlantic white cypress swamps. Plant species include pitcher plants and sun dews, low bush cranberries, redbay, Atlantic white cypress, pond pine, American sweetgum, red maple, and a wide variety of herbaceous and shrub species common to the East Coast. The refuge is one of the premier strongholds for American black bear on the Eastern Seaboard. It also has concentrations of ducks, geese, and swans. The wildlife diversity includes wading birds, shorebirds, American woodcock, raptors, black bears, alligators, white-tailed deer, raccoons, cottontail rabbits, bobwhite quail, northern river otters, red wolves, red-cockaded woodpeckers, and neotropical migrants." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Dare_County,
dbr:Tyrrell_County ;
wm:length 7.623463e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Albemarle_Sound ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Allison_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Allison Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Allison Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Allison Creek has the name of Curt Allison, a pioneer rancher." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Alloway_Creek_\(Monocacy_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alloway Creek (Monocacy River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alloway Creek is a 13.5-mile-long (21.7 km) tributary of the Monocacy River in Pennsylvania and Maryland in the United States. Via the Monocacy River, it is part of the Potomac River watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 2.172609e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Monocacy_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania_and_Maryland .
dbr:Almshouse_Branch_\(Isaac_Branch_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Almshouse Branch (Isaac Branch tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Almshouse Branch is a 3.16 mi (5.09 km) long 1st order tributary to Isaac Branch in Kent County, Delaware." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Kent_County ;
wm:length 5.085527e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.144e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "Isaac Branch tributary" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Alpine_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alpine Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Alpine Creek is a small river in San Mateo County, California.It flows about 5 miles (8 km), from its source (37°18′21″N 122°11′51″W / 37.3057°N 122.1974°W) near West Alpine Road about a mile southwest of Skyline Boulevard (CA 35), to its confluence with La Honda Creek to form San Gregorio Creek in La Honda at California State Route 84. Alpine Creek passes through Russian Ridge Open Space Preserve and ." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:confluence_with_La_Honda_Creek_to_form_San_Gregorio_Creek ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_West_Alpine_Road_about_a_mile_southwest_of_Skyline_Boulevard_CA_35 ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:San_Mateo_County ;
wm:length 8.04672e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.7536e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:San_Gregorio_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Alplaus_Kill a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alplaus Kill" ;
wm:abstractText "Alplaus Kill also called Aalplaats Creek is a river that flows into the Mohawk River in Alplaus, New York. The name is derived from Dutch, most likely meaning \"eel pond\"." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:mouthElevation 6.4008e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Aalplaats Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mohawk_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Alsek_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alsek River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Alsek River (/ˈælˌsɛk/; Tlingit Aalseix̱' ) is a wilderness river flowing from Yukon into Northern British Columbia and into Alaska. It enters the Gulf of Alaska at Dry Bay. Most of the Alsek River's basin is within protected wilderness areas and National Parks. The Alsek and its main tributary, the Tatshenshini River, are part of the Canadian Heritage Rivers System and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In the year 2016, the Alsek River captured the flow of the Slims River due to the retreat of Kaskawulsh Glacier. Researchers attributed the change in flow to human-caused climate change; this was the first time human-caused climate change was implicated in the reorganization of a river. Research indicates that in a few decades, Alsek River may further change its final course. The rapidly retreating separates Alsek River and lake from nearby Grand Plateau Lake. Geologists predict that when the two lakes merge, Alsek River will abandon its current outlet in favour of the steeper way to the ocean through Grand Plateau Lake and a small embankment, moving its outlet some 17 miles (28 km) to the southeast, within the confines of Glacier Bay National Park." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Tatshenshini_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:otherNames "Aalseix̱'" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Canadian_Heritage_Rivers_System_UNESCO_World_Heritage_Site ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Alston_Branch_\(Leipsic_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alston Branch (Leipsic River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alston Branch is a 2.17 mi (3.49 km) long 1st order tributary to the Leipsic River in Kent County, Delaware. It is only 6 miles away from the state's capital, Dover, Delaware." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Kent_County ;
wm:length 3.492276e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Leipsic_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Alum_Creek_\(Ohio\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alum Creek (Ohio)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alum Creek is 58-mile (93 km) long creek that runs north to south in central Ohio. The creek originates in Morrow County and then flows through Delaware County and finally into Franklin County, where it ends at Big Walnut Creek, which drains into the Scioto River. Alum Creek is a source of drinking water for the city of Westerville, Ohio." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Big_Walnut_Creek ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Morrow_County ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Morrow_County_Delaware_County_Franklin_County ;
wm:length 9.334172e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.188464e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Scioto_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Ohio .
dbr:Alum_Creek_\(South_Dakota\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alum Creek (South Dakota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Alum Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Alum Creek received its name on account of the naturally occurring bitter river water." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Alum_Fork a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Alum Fork" ;
wm:abstractText "Alum Fork is a stream in the U.S. state of West Virginia. It is a tributary of Leading Creek. The water of Alum Fork is impregnated with alum, hence the name." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Leading_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Amargosa_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Amargosa River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Amargosa River is an intermittent waterway, 185 miles (298 km) long, in southern Nevada and eastern California in the United States. It drains a high desert region, the Amargosa Valley in the Amargosa Desert northwest of Las Vegas, into the Mojave Desert, and finally into Death Valley where it disappears into the ground aquifer. Except for a small portion of its route in the Amargosa Canyon in California and a small portion at Beatty, Nevada, the river flows above ground only after a rare rainstorm washes the region. A 26-mile (42 km) stretch of the river between Shoshone and Dumont Dunes is protected as a National Wild and Scenic River. At the south end of Tecopa Valley the Amargosa River Natural Area protects the habitat." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 2.977286e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 8.59536e+01 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California,
dbr:Nevada .
dbr:Amazon_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Amazon Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Amazon Creek is a stream that runs through southeastern and western Eugene, Oregon, United States. It is a tributary of the Long Tom River and is Eugene's second-largest waterway after the Willamette River." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.69264e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Long_Tom_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:American_Crow_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "American Crow Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "American Crow Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. According to tradition, American Crow Creek received its name directly from Lewis and Clark." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:American_Fork_\(river\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "American Fork (river)" ;
wm:abstractText "The American Fork (commonly known as the American Fork River) is a river in Utah County, Utah, United States." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Utah_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.370076e+03 ;
wm:otherNames "American Fork River" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Utah .
dbr:American_Horse_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "American Horse Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "American Horse Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Some say the creek bears the name of American Horse, an Oglala Lakota chief, while others believe the creek derives its name from an incident involving a certain Indian horse thief and his \"American horses\"." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:American_River_\(Washington\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "American River (Washington)" ;
wm:abstractText "The American River is a tributary of the Bumping River in Washington. It flows down the east side of the Cascade Range, through Wenatchee National Forest and the William O. Douglas Wilderness. The American River part of the Columbia River basin, via the Bumping, Naches, and Yakima rivers. From its source at American Lake, it flows north for several miles, picking up its tributary the Rainier Fork American River, which flows east down from the vicinity of Chinook Pass. State Route 410 crossing Chinook Pass from Mount Rainier National Park, then follows the Rainier Fork and the American River valleys. After its confluence with Rainier Fork, the American River flows through Pleasant Valley. It joins the Bumping River within the . An early name for the American River was Miners Creek. According to historian Gretta Gossett, the river was renamed for the American River in California, \"by hopeful miners\"." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:American_Lake ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Rainier_Fork_American_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 3.218688e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 8.42772e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Miners Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Bumping_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Washington .
dbr:Americano_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Americano Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Americano Creek is a 7.5-mile (12 km) long westward-flowing stream in the California counties of Sonoma and Marin. It flows into the Estero Americano, a 9.2 mi (15 km) long estuary, and thence to the Pacific Ocean. This article covers both watercourses." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Estero_Americano ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sonoma_and_Marin ;
wm:length 1.207008e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 6.096e+00 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Pacific_Ocean ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Ames_Creek_\(South_Santiam_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ames Creek (South Santiam River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ames Creek is a small tributary of the South Santiam River in the U.S. state of Oregon. It begins near Chimney Rock in the foothills of the Cascade Range in Linn County. It flows northwest to meet the river at Sweet Home, about 33 miles (53 km) by river from the South Santiam's confluence with the Santiam River. Ames Creek passes under U.S. Route 20 just before entering the river." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Chimney_Rock ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Linn_County ;
wm:length 5.310822e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.679448e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:South_Santiam_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Amnicon_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Amnicon River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Amnicon River is a 45.5-mile (73.2 km) river in Douglas County, Wisconsin. The river's source is east of Dowling Lake and Amnicon Lake in central Douglas County, and its mouth is at Lake Superior east of Superior. Amnicon Falls State Park includes two major waterfalls along the river. The two waterfalls highlight the Douglas Fault, which separates basalt and sandstone formations in the area. The Upper Falls flow over basalt, while the Lower Falls flow over sandstone. In the nineteenth century, loggers used the river to transport logs to Lake Superior. These logging operations provided building materials for Superior and Duluth, both new towns at the time." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Superior ;
wm:hasSource dbr:east_of_Dowling_Lake_and_Amnicon_Lake ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Douglas_County ;
wm:length 7.322515e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Wisconsin .
dbr:Amo_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Amo Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Amo Creek is a stream in North Slope Borough, Alaska, in the United States. It is a tributary of the Colville River The name Amo is derived from the Eskimo word meaning \"wolf\"." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:North_Slope_Borough ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Colville_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Amon_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Amon Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Amon Creek is the largest tributary of the Lower Yakima River in Benton County, Washington. From the source of its East Fork to its mouth at the Yakima, it flows about 13 miles (21 km), passing through Kennewick and Richland. The East Fork as well as the main course north of where both forks come together flow south to north. The West Fork starts in Badger Canyon by heading south, but slowly wraps around along with the topography of the canyon to flow out of it northbound. There is an easily visible riparian zone along most of the length of the main course, along with the West Fork up Badger Canyon and the East Fork until I-82." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:source_of_its_East_Fork ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Benton_County ;
wm:length 2.092147e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.069848e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Lower_Yakima_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Washington .
dbr:Amtkeli a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Amtkeli" ;
wm:abstractText "Amtkeli (Georgian: ამტყელი) is a small river in north-western Georgia. It originates in the Caucasus Mountains, in the region of Upper Abkhazia, in the western part of the near . It flows south to Lake Amtkeli and joins the Kodori River. Its catchment area is 398 square kilometres (154 sq mi). The Amtkeli is fed by snow, rain and groundwater. Floods occur in late spring and summer, and the low flows occur in winter." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Caucasus_Mountains ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Georgia ;
wm:length 3.9e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Amtkeli (Georgian: ამტყელი)" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Kodori_River .
dbr:Ana_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ana River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ana River is a short spring-fed river in south-central Oregon. It is on the northwestern edge of the Great Basin drainage. It flows 7 miles (11 km) from springs at the foot of Winter Ridge through high desert, range, and wetlands before emptying into Summer Lake. For most of its course, the Ana River flows through the Summer Lake Wildlife Area, which is maintained by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The river provides habitat for many mammal and bird species, as well as several fish species, including the rare Summer Lake Tui chub. The largest hybrid striped bass ever caught in Oregon was taken from Ana Reservoir in 2009." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Summer_Lake ;
wm:hasSource dbr:springs_at_the_foot_of_Winter_Ridge ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.126541e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.26492e+03 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Anahulu_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anahulu River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Anahulu River (also called Anahulu Stream) is a watercourse on the island of Oahu in the U.S. state of Hawaii. It is 7.1 miles (11.4 km) long. The Hawaiian meaning of the name is ten days." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.142634e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Anahulu Stream" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Hawaii .
dbr:Anaktuvuk_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anaktuvuk River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Anaktuvuk River (Inupiaq: Anaqtuuvak) is a river in Alaska's North Slope. One hundred and thirty-five miles (217 km) long, it flows west from glaciers in the Endicott Mountains changing direction just north of Anaktuvuk Pass to flow north to the Arctic Coastal Plain where it joins the Colville River. Its headwaters are formed by runoff from various glaciers in the Gates of the Arctic Wilderness on the slopes of Fan Mountain, Alapah Mountain and Limestack Mountain, the last of which lies on the watershed divide between the Arctic Coastal Plain and the Koyukuk River, and feeds the Anaktuvuk River via Graylime Creek. Its first major tributary is the John River which joins it at 68°12′14″N 151°36′50″W / 68.20389°N 151.61389°W. The joins it at 69°18′11″N 150°59′58″W / 69.30306°N 150.99944°W. \"The first geologic transect of the Arctic Slope was conducted during the summer of 1901 by USGS geologist F.C. Schrader and topographer W.J. Peters, who descended the Anaktuvuk River in canoes to its junction with the Colville River.\" In 1938, Robert \"Bob\" Marshall explored the sources of the river." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Colville_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Endicott_Mountains ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:John_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.172614e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.66344e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Anaqtuuvak" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Colville_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Anchor_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anchor River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Anchor River is a stream on the Kenai Peninsula in the U.S. state of Alaska. Beginning near Bald Mountain on the eastern side of the lower peninsula, if flows generally west for 30 miles (48 km) into Cook Inlet near Anchor Point on the western side of the peninsula. The river mouth is 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Homer. The middle reaches of the river pass through the Anchor River and Fritz Creek Critical Habitat Area, meant to protect fish and wildlife, especially moose. The lower river intersects North Fork Road and then the Sterling Highway before reaching Anchor and the Anchor River State Recreation Area (SRA) at the coast." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Bald_Mountain_on_the_eastern_side_of_the_lower_peninsula ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.828032e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.8768e+00 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Anclote_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anclote River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Anclote River, running for 29 miles (47 km) near Tarpon Springs, Florida flows westward towards the Gulf of Mexico from its source of creeks and springs inland. The river is home to a variety of fish and wildlife. Anclote River is home to the sponging and fishing industries of Tarpon Springs (including a large shrimp industry). It is a major site for tourists of the area as it flows through the spongedocks of Tarpon Springs. An extension of the Pinellas Trail which crosses the Anclote River was dedicated on June 15, 2004. The new extension is built along abandoned Atlantic Coast Line railroad grade, which once serviced industry on the north side of the river." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Gulf_of_Mexico ;
wm:hasSource dbr:inland ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.667098e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Florida .
dbr:Anderson_Creek_\(Pennsylvania\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anderson Creek (Pennsylvania)" ;
wm:abstractText "Anderson Creek is a 23.6-mile-long (38.0 km) tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The upstream portion of the Anderson Creek Watershed is a PA DCNR Conservation Area, and falls from Rockton Mountain, along Interstate I-80 in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania. Anderson Creek is classified as a Class II-III+ whitewater stream and defines the Eastern Continental Divide. Brown Springs, in the Moshannon State Forest, near Rockton, Pennsylvania, is a put-in for kayaking to the West Branch Susquehanna River at Bridgeport, Pennsylvania. The vertical drop of Anderson Creek is 1450 ft. to 1175 ft. \"Anderson is a stream of considerable size, and in a region not so well supplied with raftable waters as this, might be well classed among rivers.\"" ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:West_Branch_Susquehanna_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Rockton_Mountain ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Clearfield_County ;
wm:length 3.688616e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.450336e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Anderson_Fork a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anderson Fork" ;
wm:abstractText "Anderson Fork is a stream in Clinton and Greene counties, Ohio, in the United States. Anderson Fork was named for Richard C. Anderson, a government surveyor." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Clinton,
dbr:Greene ;
wm:traverses dbr:Ohio .
dbr:Anderson_River_\(Indiana\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anderson River (Indiana)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Anderson River is a 50.4-mile-long (81.1 km) tributary of the Ohio River in southern Indiana in the United States. Via the Ohio, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River. The Anderson rises in western Crawford County in the Hoosier National Forest and flows generally southwardly through southeastern Dubois County and along the common boundary of Perry and Spencer counties, east of the town of Saint Meinrad. It joins the Ohio River just downstream of the town of Troy. Near its mouth it collects the Middle Fork Anderson River, which flows for its entire length in Perry County." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Ohio_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:western_Crawford_County ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Middle_Fork_Anderson_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Crawford_County,
dbr:Dubois_County,
dbr:Perry_County,
dbr:Spencer_County ;
wm:length 8.04672e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.18872e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Ohio_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Indiana .
dbr:Andi_Koysu a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Andi Koysu" ;
wm:abstractText "The Andi Koysu (Russian: Андийское Койсу - Andiyskoye Koysu, Georgian: ანდის ყოისუ - Andis Qoisu) is a river in Dagestan (Russia) and Georgia. It starts at the confluence of the rivers and , near Omalo in the Tusheti region of Georgia. It is 144 kilometres (89 mi) long or 192 kilometres (119 mi) including its longest source river, Tushetis Alazani, and its drainage basin covers 4,810 square kilometres (1,860 sq mi). At its confluence with the , near the village Gimry in central Dagestan, it forms the river Sulak." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:river_Sulak ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Omalo_in_the_Tusheti_region_of_Georgia ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Russia_Georgia ;
wm:length 1.44e+05 ;
wm:otherNames "Андийское Койсу;Andiyskoye Koysu;ანდის ყოისუ;Andis Qoisu" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Sulak .
dbr:Andreafsky_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Andreafsky River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Andreafsky River (Yup'ik: Negeqliq) is a 120-mile (190 km) tributary of the Yukon River in the U.S. state of Alaska. The Andreafsky flows south from near Iprugalet Mountain in the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge to meet the larger river at Pitkas Point, near the village of St. Mary's. In 1980, the Andreafsky and the East Fork Andreafsky rivers became part of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System. The designation covers about 265 river miles (RM) or 426 river kilometers (RK) along the two streams and their headwaters. About 198 RM (319 RK) of these flow through the Yukon Delta Wilderness; 54 RM (87 RK) cross private lands, and 13 RM (21 RK) flow through a wild-river corridor within non-wilderness refuge lands." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Iprugalet_Mountain ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.93e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.048e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "Negeqliq" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Yukon_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Andrews_Run_\(Brokenstraw_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Andrews Run (Brokenstraw Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Andrews Run is a 3.57 mi (5.75 km) long 3rd order tributary to Brokenstraw Creek. It is classed as a cold water fishery by the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 5.745358e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.761232e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Angels_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Angels Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Angels Creek is a 19-mile (31 km)-long tributary of the Stanislaus River in Calaveras County, California in the United States. It flows generally southwest from Forest Meadows, through the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, to join the Stanislaus River in New Melones Lake. The creek takes its name from the historic Gold Rush town of Angels Camp. There are two hydroelectric plants on the creek operated by the Utica Water and Power Authority." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Forest_Meadows ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Calaveras_County ;
wm:length 3.057754e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.2004e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Stanislaus_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Angle_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Angle Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Angle Creek is a stream in Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska, in the United States. Angle Creek was so named because of its course." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lake_and_Peninsula_Borough ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Anglins_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anglins Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Anglins Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Anglins Creek most likely has the name of an early settler. It is known for whitewater rafting." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Aniak_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aniak River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aniak River (/ˌæniːˈæk/) (Yup'ik: Anyaraq) is a 95-mile (153 km) tributary of the Kuskokwim River in the U.S. state of Alaska. Beginning south of , the river generally flows north. The upper sections drain part of the and Kuskokwim mountains, and the lower portions transition to the Kuskokwim lowlands and tundra. The river empties into the Kuskokwim River slightly east of Aniak. Aniak is a Yup'ik word meaning \"the place where it comes out,\" which refers to the mouth of the Aniak River. This river played a role in the of 1900–01, when prospectors from Nome rushed to the Kuskokwim River Delta after hearing of discoveries along the \"Yellow River\", later believed to be the Aniak River because of the yellow tint from silt carried from headwater streams. The Aniak has excellent sports fishing opportunities for salmon, Arctic char, rainbow trout, Arctic grayling, and, near the river mouth in spring, northern pike and sheefish. In addition, Aniak Lake supports populations of lake trout. Several sports fishing outfitters operate along the Aniak. Navigation of the river is tricky, since it is swift flowing with multiple channels and many hazards, including debris loads, log jams and sweepers (trees hanging just above the water which \"sweep\" the surface as it flows by) that change position with each spring's ice breakup cycle. The lower river is more navigable with an experienced boat driver. The upper river, however, is typically only accessed by rafts which can be dropped off by airplane at Aniak Lake, 100 mi (160 km) upstream from the Kuskokwim confluence. The Aniak River itself, approximately 25 mi (40 km) from the mouth, is unusable for surface travel in winter due to incomplete freeze and speed of flow. Historical winter trails parallel most of its length." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:south_of ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.528877e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.58496e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Anyaraq" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Kuskokwim_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Aniakchak_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aniakchak River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aniakchak River is a stream, 27 miles (43 km) long, in Lake and Peninsula Borough on the Alaska Peninsula in the United States. It arises in in the crater of Mount Aniakchak, a volcano in the Aleutian Range. It flows eastward from Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve into and the Pacific Ocean. In 1980, a total of 63 miles (101 km) of streams, including the main stem Aniakchak and several tributaries, all within Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve, were designated \"wild\" and added to the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System. The \"wild\" tributaries are Hidden, Mystery, and Albert Johnson creeks and the North Fork Aniakchak River." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:crater_of_Mount_Aniakchak ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lake_and_Peninsula_Borough ;
wm:length 4.345229e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:National_Wild_and_Scenic_Rivers_System ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Animas_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Animas Creek" ;
wm:abstractText """Animas Creek is an intermittent stream in the Animas Valley within Hidalgo County, New Mexico. Is source is located at the confluence of Foster Draw and Taylor Draw, at 31°30′28″N 108°52′09″W / 31.50778°N 108.86917°W an elevation of 5,151 feet / 1,570 meters. Its mouth is in the Animas Valley, in at an elevation of 4,662 feet / 1,421 meters. However topographic maps show its wash runs farther northward to the southern outskirts of Animas, New Mexico at 31°55′51″N 108°49′36″W / 31.93083°N 108.82667°W. The tributaries of Animas Creek from its source northward to its mouth are:
* from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* from the Animas Mountains.
* Whitmire Creek, from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* , from the Animas Mountains.
* Bercham Draw, from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* , from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* , from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* , from the Animas Mountains.
* , from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* , from the Animas Mountains.
* , from the Animas Mountains.
* , from the Peloncillo Mountains.
* Bull Creek, from the Animas Mountains.
* , from the Animas Mountains.
* Whitmire Creek, from the Animas Mountains.
* , from the Animas Mountains.
* , from the Peloncillo Mountains.""" ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Animas_Valley ;
wm:hasSource ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Hidalgo_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.2192e+00 ;
wm:sourceElevation 1.524e+00 ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Mexico .
dbr:Ann_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ann Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Ann Run is a stream in the U.S. state of West Virginia. It is located in the town of Bridgeport. In Harrison County. A variant name was Anne Branch. According to tradition, Ann Run derives its name from Anne Bailey, who paid a visit to the area." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Harrison_County ;
wm:otherNames "Anne Branch" ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Anna_River_\(Michigan\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anna River (Michigan)" ;
wm:abstractText """The Anna River is a 7.1-mile-long (11.4 km) river on the Upper Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. The mouth of the river is at 46°24′40″N 86°38′26″W / 46.41111°N 86.64056°W in the city of Munising on the South Bay of Grand Island Harbor on Lake Superior. The river rises in the Anna Marsh in eastern Au Train Township at 46°24′40″N 86°38′26″W / 46.41111°N 86.64056°W. It flows first to the southeast, then turns mostly east and receives the outflow from Mud Lake and the Valley Spur Creek. It is joined by Wagner Creek near the Wagner Falls Scenic Site and turns to the north into the city of Munising. Portions of the river run through the Hiawatha National Forest. Several waterfalls in the river's watershed are regional attractions (in order from the mouth inland):
* Horseshoe Falls on Stutts Creek near Munising. Directions: From M-28 near Munising's southern limits, turn east onto Prospect St. Go 2 blocks to Bell Avenue and turn left (north). Go 1 block to Horseshoe Falls parking area on the right.
* Alger Falls on Alger Creek, about one mile (1.6 km) south of Munising where M-94 meets M-28. This waterfall cascades down 30 feet (9.1 m) of rock and can be easily seen along the east side of M-28, although the water flow varies considerably.
* Wagner Falls Scenic Site on Wagner Creek, about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) south of Munising and just west of Wetmore on the east side of M-94. The state-owned, 22-acre (89,000 m2) Wagner Falls Scenic Site encompasses Wagner Falls.""" ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:South_Bay_of_Grand_Island_Harbor_on_Lake_Superior ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Anna_Marsh_in_eastern_Au_Train_Township ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Mud_Lake,
dbr:Valley_Spur_Creek_Wagner_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.142631e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.840992e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Lake_Superior ;
wm:traverses dbr:Michigan .
dbr:Annaquatucket_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Annaquatucket River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Annaquatucket River is a river in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. It flows approximately 7 km (5 mi) and drains a watershed of 18.9 km² (7.3 sq. mi). There are two dams along the river's length." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.126538e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Rhode_Island .
dbr:Annie_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Annie Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Annie Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Annie Creek has the name of Annie Clark, the daughter of a pioneer settler." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Another_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Another River" ;
wm:abstractText "Another River is a river in Kenai Peninsula Borough, Alaska, in the United States. \"Another River\" was so named in 1927 by geologists who had already named many other rivers." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Kenai_Peninsula_Borough ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antelope Creek (Butte County, South Dakota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antelope Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Antelope Creek was after the antelope that were often seen by the stream in the summertime." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Butte_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antelope Creek (Day County, South Dakota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antelope Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Antelope Creek was named on account of antelope which frequented the area." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Day_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antelope Creek (Harding County, South Dakota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antelope Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Antelope Creek was named for the antelope native to the area." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Harding_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Antelope_Creek_\(Little_Butte_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antelope Creek (Little Butte Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antelope Creek is a tributary of Little Butte Creek in the U.S. state of Oregon. It begins in the foothills of the Cascade Range southeast of Medford and flows generally northwest to meet the larger creek downstream of Eagle Point and about 3 miles (5 km) by water from Little Butte Creek's mouth on the Rogue River. The creek passes under Oregon Route 62 (Crater Lake Highway) between Eagle Point and White City, slightly before entering Little Butte Creek. Named tributaries of Antelope Creek from source to mouth are Yankee Creek, Quarter Branch, and Dry Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:foothills_of_the_Cascade_Range_southeast_of_Medford ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.831336e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Rogue_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antelope Creek (Todd County, South Dakota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antelope Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Antelope Creek was named for the antelope, a native species in South Dakota." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Todd_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Antietam_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antietam Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Antietam Creek (/ænˈtiːtəm/) is a 41.7-mile-long (67.1 km) tributary of the Potomac River located in south central Pennsylvania and western Maryland in the United States, a region known as the Hagerstown Valley. The creek became famous as a focal point of the Battle of Antietam during the American Civil War." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Potomac_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 6.710948e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maryland,
dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Antietam_Creek_\(Schuylkill_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antietam Creek (Schuylkill River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antietam Creek is a 10.5-mile-long (16.9 km) tributary of the Schuylkill River in Berks County, Pennsylvania. It rises just south of Alsace Manor in Alsace Township. There are several non-named tributaries to the creek. It empties into the Schuylkill just south of Reading." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Schuylkill_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:just_south_of_Alsace_Manor ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Berks_County ;
wm:length 1.610953e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.78536e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Antler_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antler River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Antler River is located in the Prairie Pothole Region of North America's Great Plains in south-eastern Saskatchewan and south-western Manitoba in Canada in an area known as Palliser's Triangle. Its source is in Saskatchewan's Moose Mountain Upland and it is a major tributary of the Souris River. As a result, its flood levels are monitored by the United States Geological Survey. In 2011, several communities along the river experienced abnormally severe spring flooding that resulted in damage to many bridges crossing the river. Near Carnduff, repairs were still ongoing months after the water level had subsided. The Antler River Recreation District is an association of communities in the south-western corner of Manitoba that are on or near the river and its related branches. Towns involved include Melita and Pierson." ;
wm:hasMouth ,
;
wm:hasSource dbr:south-eastern_Saskatchewan_and_south-western_Manitoba_in_Canada ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Canada ;
wm:partOfSystem ,
.
dbr:Antoine_Creek_\(Louisiana\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antoine Creek (Louisiana)" ;
wm:abstractText "Antoine Creek is a stream in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, in the United States." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Natchitoches_Parish ;
wm:traverses dbr:Louisiana .
dbr:Antoine_River_\(Arkansas\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Antoine River (Arkansas)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Antoine River is a 50.4-mile-long (81.1 km) tributary of the Little Missouri River in southwestern Arkansas in the United States. Via the Little Missouri, Ouachita and Red rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River. According to the GNIS, it has also been known as Antoine Creek. A short headwater tributary of the river is known as the Little Antoine River." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 8.111074e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Antoine Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mississippi_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arkansas .
dbr:Anvik_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anvik River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Anvik River(/ˈæn.vɪk/) is a 140-mile (230 km) tributary of the Yukon River in the U.S. state of Alaska. It flows southeast from the Nulato Hills to its mouth on the larger river 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of Anvik. The annual production of summer chum salmon along the Anvik River is thought to be the largest in the Yukon River basin. The river has excellent fishing for four species of salmon as well as northern pike, sheefish, Arctic char, rainbow trout, and grayling. Rated Class 1 (easy) on the International Scale of River Difficulty, about 121 miles (195 km) of the Anvik is suitable for floating by open canoes, folding boats and kayaks, and inflatable canoes, kayaks, and rafts. Floatplanes, riverboats, and wheeled airplanes that can land on gravel bars can transport boaters as far as McDonald Creek, near the headwaters." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Nulato_Hills ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.253082e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.58496e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Yukon_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Anvil_Creek_\(Alaska\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Anvil Creek (Alaska)" ;
wm:abstractText """Anvil Creek is a stream in Alaska. Part of it is in the Nome mining district near Nome, Alaska and became a center of gold rush attention after three Swedes found gold along it. The resulting influx of prospectors brought thousands of people to Nome in the spring of 1899. The large placer mine gold find was one of the first in Alaska and the Anvil Creek Gold Discovery Site was one of the richest placer claim sites ever found in Alaska. It yielded more than $5 million during its first five years. By 1965 the site was "largely returned to nature". The gold find helped trigger the Nome gold rush. The mines in the area included and the Snake River. The activity led to the establishment of Nome. Claim jumpers tried to challenge the Swedes claims to the Anvil Creek claims based on their nationality. A government corruption case involving judges and politicians including Alexander McKenzie and Arthur H. Noyes also developed. Teller Road crosses the creek one mile below the site and the area is now home to wind turbines. Another one of the gold mining areas by the creek was an alluvial placer gold mine in Nekula Gulch by a headwater tributary to Anvil Creek. The Caribou Bill mine (NM238) is also nearby. There is an Anvil Creek fault.
* Gold nuggets found by Placer Mining Co. along Anvil Creek, ca. 1901
* Gold miners along Anvil Creek, 1902
* Sluicing operation on Anvil Creek ca. 1900
* Terminus of the Wild Goose Railroad at Anvil Creek ca. 1901""" ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.126541e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.9624e+00 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Apalachee_River_\(Alabama\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apalachee River (Alabama)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Apalachee River is a distributary river in Baldwin County, Alabama that forms part of the Mobile-Tensaw River Delta. It branches off from the Tensaw River at 30°44′36″N 87°55′55″W / 30.74333°N 87.93194°W. From there it flows southward for approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) before emptying into Mobile Bay at 30°39′39″N 87°57′31″W / 30.66074°N 87.95860°W." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Mobile_Bay ;
wm:hasSource ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Baldwin_County ;
wm:length 9.656064e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mobile-Tensaw_River_Delta ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alabama .
dbr:Apalachee_River_\(Georgia\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apalachee River (Georgia)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Apalachee River is a 74-mile-long (119 km) tributary of the Oconee River in the U.S. state of Georgia. It rises north of Lawrenceville in eastern Gwinnett County and flows southeast to join the Oconee River in Lake Oconee west of Greensboro. It is spanned by the Kilgore Mill Covered Bridge." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Oconee_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:north_of_Lawrenceville ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Gwinnett_County ;
wm:length 1.190912e+05 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Oconee_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Georgia .
dbr:Apanolio_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apanolio Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Apanolio Creek is a 3.6-mile-long (5.8 km) southward-flowing stream in San Mateo County, California, United States which is a tributary of Pilarcitos Creek." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:San_Mateo_County ;
wm:length 5.793624e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Pilarcitos_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Apishapa_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apishapa River" ;
wm:abstractText "Apishapa River is a 139-mile-long (224 km) tributary of the Arkansas River that flows from a source near West Spanish Peak in southern Colorado. It joins the Arkansas east of Fowler, Colorado. A U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) station, #07119500, located along this river near Fowler measures the river's discharge. The level and salinity levels of the Apishapa River are monitored by gaging stations installed at three locations along the headwaters of the river in 2007." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Arkansas_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_West_Spanish_Peak ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.236983e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.300886e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Arkansas_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Colorado .
dbr:Apple_Creek_\(Mississippi_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apple Creek (Mississippi River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Apple Creek is a stream that rises in western Perry County, Missouri and empties into the Mississippi River, forming the boundary between Perry and Cape Girardeau counties." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:western_Perry_County_Missouri ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Cape_Girardeau_County,
dbr:Perry_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.81456e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mississippi_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Apple_River_\(Illinois\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apple River (Illinois)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Apple River is a tributary of the Mississippi River, about 55 miles (89 km) long, in southwestern Wisconsin and northwestern Illinois in the United States. It rises in Lafayette County, Wisconsin, and flows for most of its length in Illinois, through Jo Daviess and Carroll Counties. Along its course it passes through Apple River Canyon State Park and the town of Hanover. It flows into the Mississippi River about 7 mi (11 km) northwest of Savanna. In Jo Daviess County, it collects two short tributaries known as the West Fork Apple River and South Fork Apple River." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Lafayette_County_Wisconsin ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Carroll_Counties,
dbr:Jo_Daviess_County ;
wm:length 8.851392e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mississippi_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Illinois .
dbr:Apple_River_\(Wisconsin\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Apple River (Wisconsin)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Apple River is a 77.5-mile-long (124.7 km) tributary of the St. Croix River in northwestern Wisconsin in the United States. Via the St. Croix, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River. It issues from Staples Lake in Barron County and flows generally southwestwardly through Polk and St. Croix counties. In northern Polk County, it gathers the Fox Creek near White Ash Lake and traverses several lakes throughout its course. The river flows through the city of Amery and the villages of Star Prairie and Somerset. It joins the St. Croix River 7 miles (11 km) northeast of Stillwater, Minnesota. In the Ojibwe language, the Apple River is called Waabiziipinikaan-ziibi, meaning \"River Abundant with Swan Potatoes\". This name was translated into French, but only pomme (apple) of the French word for \"potato\" (pomme de terre - apple from the earth) was translated into English. The Apple River was once an important route of trade for the logging industry; timber was floated downstream from logging camps in the north to a sawmill in Amery, Wisconsin where it was cut, loaded onto trains and transported throughout the region. Today, the river generates tourism revenue through recreation and resorts, attracting 500,000 visitors a year. Its relatively gentle rapids make it very popular for canoeing, tubing, camping, concerts, and is a popular fishing spot through all seasons." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:St._Croix_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Staples_Lake ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Barron_County,
dbr:Polk_County,
dbr:St._Croix_counties ;
wm:length 1.247242e+05 ;
wm:otherNames "Waabiziipinikaan-ziibi" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:St._Croix_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Wisconsin .
dbr:Appoquinimink_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Appoquinimink River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Appoquinimink River is a river flowing to Delaware Bay in northern Delaware in the United States. The river is 15.3 miles (24.6 km) long and drains an area of 47 square miles (120 km2) on the Atlantic Coastal Plain. The Appoquinimink flows for its entire length in southern New Castle County. It rises approximately 2 miles (3 km) west of Townsend and flows generally eastwardly, south of Middletown and past Odessa, to its mouth at the northern end of Delaware Bay, approximately 3 miles (5 km) east of Odessa. In its upper course the river passes through two man-made lakes, Wiggins Mill Pond and Noxontown Lake; the river is tidal to the dam at Noxontown Lake, and salinity from Delaware Bay typically affects the lowermost 5 miles (8 km) of the river. The lower 7 miles (11 km) of the river are considered to be navigable by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. It collects three named tributaries along its course: From the north, Deep Creek, 4.2 miles (6.8 km) long (also known historically as the \"North Appoquinimink River\"); and Drawyers Creek, 8.2 miles (13.2 km) long; and from the south, Hangmans Run. According to 2002 data from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, 54.9% of the Appoquinimink River watershed is occupied by agricultural uses (predominantly soybeans, corn, and wheat); 15.1% is residential; 9.9% is wetland; and 8.8% is forested. In 2004, a non-profit group, The Appoquinimink River Association, was founded with a mission to protect the water and natural resources in the region surrounding the Appoquinimink River." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:approximately_2_miles_3_km_west_of_Townsend ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Deep_Creek_Drawyers_Creek,
dbr:Hangmans_Run ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:southern_New_Castle_County ;
wm:length 2.414016e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Atlantic_Coastal_Plain ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Aptos_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aptos Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aptos Creek is a southward flowing 9.5 miles (15.3 km) creek that begins on on the southwestern slope of the Santa Cruz Mountains in Santa Cruz County, California and enters Monterey Bay, at Seacliff State Beach in Aptos, California." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:southwestern_slope_of_the_Santa_Cruz_Mountains ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Cruz_County ;
wm:length 1.528873e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.1336e+00 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Monterey_Bay ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Aquetong_Creek_\(Delaware_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aquetong Creek (Delaware River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Aquetong Creek is a tributary of the Delaware River in Solebury Township and New Hope, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Rising from the Aquetong Spring, now known as Ingham Spring, just south of the intersection of U.S. Route 202, Lower Mountain Road, and Ingham Road, it runs about 10.75 miles (17.30 km) to its confluence with the Delaware." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:confluence_with_the_Delaware ;
wm:hasSource dbr:just_south_of_the_intersection_of_U.S._Route_202_Lower_Mountain_Road_and_Ingham_Road ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Bucks_County ;
wm:length 4.055547e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.49352e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Ingham Spring" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Aquia_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aquia Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aquia Creek ( /ɑːˈkwaɪə/) is a 27.6-mile-long (44.4 km) tributary of the tidal segment of the Potomac River and is located in northern Virginia. The creek's headwaters lie in southeastern Fauquier County, and it empties into the Potomac at Brent Point in Stafford County, 45 miles (72 km) south of Washington, D.C. The White House was built largely using sandstone quarried from Aquia Creek from 1792 to 1799." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Potomac_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:southeastern_Fauquier_County ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Fauquier_County,
dbr:Stafford_County ;
wm:length 4.441789e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Potomac_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Aquilla_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aquilla Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aquilla Creek is a river in Texas." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Arachno_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arachno Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Arachno Creek or Spider Creek is a creek in Navarre, Florida, United States. It is a third of a mile long, and connects to the East Bay River. Its name comes from the commonality of arachnids and spiderwebs along its span. Though it is debated, it is currently believed to have been named by a local Boy Scout from Gulf Breeze. It is completely located on the grounds of Eglin Air Force Base. It can be accessed by boat or kayak via the East Bay River Public Boat Ramp. The creek has been calculated to have a discharge rate of 21 cubic feet per second." ;
wm:discharge 2.1e+01 ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:East_Bay_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 5.310835e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Spider Creek" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Florida .
dbr:Aragvi a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aragvi" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aragvi (Georgian: არაგვი) and its basin are in Georgia on the southern slopes of the Caucasus Mountains. The river is 112 kilometres (70 mi) long, and its basin covers an area of 2,740 square kilometres (1,060 sq mi). The ground strata are mostly sandstone, slate, and limestone. The Zhinvali Dam and its 130 MW hydro-electric power station generate much of Georgia's power, and its construction in 1986 formed the Zhinvali Reservoir, upon whose north-western shores rises Ananuri castle with its 17th-century Church of the Assumption." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Georgia ;
wm:length 1.12e+05 .
dbr:Aransas_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aransas River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aransas River is a short river in south Texas in the United States. It drains an area of the south Texas coastal plains into the Gulf of Mexico. It rises in Bee County southwest of Beeville and north of Skidmore, from the confluence of three creeks: Olmos, Aransas, and Poesta. It flows generally south and southeast in a highly winding course, entering Copano Bay on the Gulf of Mexico along the Refugio-Aransas county line, approximately 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Rockport. For some of the period when Texas was a state in Mexico, the Aransas formed the southwestern boundary, separating it from the neighboring Mexican state of Coahuila. There's good fishing in this river in Woodsboro." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Copano_Bay ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Bee_County_southwest_of_Beeville_and_north_of_Skidmore ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Refugio-Aransas_county_line ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Gulf_of_Mexico ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Ararat_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ararat River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ararat River is a tributary of the Yadkin River in southwestern Virginia and northwestern North Carolina in the United States. Via the Yadkin it is part of the watershed of the Pee Dee River, which flows to the Atlantic Ocean. The Ararat River rises in the Blue Ridge Mountains in southwestern Patrick County, Virginia, and flows southwardly into Surry County, North Carolina, where it flows through the city of Mount Airy and joins the Yadkin River, about 5 mi (8 km) northwest of East Bend. The river is stocked with brown, brook, and rainbow trout." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Blue_Ridge_Mountains_in_southwestern_Patrick_County_Virginia ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Patrick_County,
dbr:Surry_County ;
wm:length 5.220712e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.4384e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina,
dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Arastradero_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arastradero Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Arastradero Creek is a mainly seasonal 2.4-mile-long (3.9 km) generally north by northeastward-flowing stream originating in the Palo Alto foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains in Santa Clara County, California, United States. It is almost wholly protected by the Pearson–Arastradero Preserve, before joining Matadero Creek where its waters descend to San Francisco Bay." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Palo_Alto_foothills ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Clara_County ;
wm:length 3.862416e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 7.98576e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:San_Francisco_Bay ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Aravaipa_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aravaipa Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aravaipa Creek is a drainage between three mountain ranges in southwest Graham County, Arizona – the Galiuro Mountains, the Santa Teresa Mountains and the Pinaleno Mountains. These mountains are part of the high altitude Madrean Sky Islands located in southern Arizona and New Mexico in the United States, and northern Sonora and Chihuahua states in Mexico. Aravaipa Creek originates on the southeast flank of the Galiuro Mountains at Durkee Canyon and at 8,889 feet (2,709 m). It then flows northwest through the narrow, fault-blocked Aravaipa Valley with the Pinaleno Mountains bordering the valley on the east and the Santa Teresa Mountains bordering on the northeast. On the west side of the valley, the creek follows the northeast and north perimeter of the Galiuro Mountains massif flowing northwest, west, and then southwest through and around the range's north end to meet the San Pedro River a few miles south of Dudleyville. The town of Klondyke is located in the heart of the Aravaipa Valley about 35 miles west from Eden which is located on U.S. Route 70. There is also access to Klondyke via Arizona State Route 266 to Bonita (passing near Fort Grant) and thence on a gravel road north through the valley. Bonita may also be accessed by gravel road north from Willcox. West of Klondyke in the Galiuro Mountains is the location of the well known Power's Cabin shootout. The former populated area of Aravaipa is located at the end of the Klondyke Road on the slopes of the Santa Teresa Mountains, north of Klondyke. Aravaipa Canyon at the north end of the Galiuro Mountains contains the Aravaipa Canyon Wilderness. The creek goes northwest then southwest through the canyon and downstream about 9 miles (14 km) to meet the San Pedro River and Arizona State Route 77 between Dudleyville and Mammoth. Access to the eastern end of the wilderness is located north of Klondyke on the Klondyke Road." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:San_Pedro_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Durkee_Canyon ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Graham_County ;
wm:length 8.851392e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:sourceElevation 2.4384e+00 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arizona .
dbr:Arbuckle_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arbuckle Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Arbuckle Creek is located in Central Florida. It flows from Lake Arbuckle and eventually feeds into Lake Istokpoga after passing by the and (a bombing range outside Avon Park, Florida). The creek offers scenic paddling through natural habitats. A public boat ramp provides access for small boats and paddle craft. The creel covers about 25 miles. According to an interview, the Seminole Chief Billy Bowlegs III was born on the Arbuckle Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Istokpoga ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Lake_Arbuckle ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.02335e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Central_Florida .
dbr:Arch_Creek_\(Montana\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arch Creek (Montana)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arch Creek is a stream in Carbon County, Montana, in the United States. Arch Creek was named from a nearby natural arch." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Carbon_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:Montana .
dbr:Archers_Fork a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Archers Fork" ;
wm:abstractText "Archers Fork is a stream located entirely within Washington County, Ohio. It is a tributary of the Little Muskingum River, which it enters near the community of Dart. Archers Fork was named for one Mr. Archer, an early settler." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Little_Muskingum_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Washington_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Little_Muskingum_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Ohio .
dbr:Arches_Fork a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arches Fork" ;
wm:abstractText "Arches Fork is a stream in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Arches Fork derives its name from Archibald Woods, a surveyor." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Arenosa_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arenosa Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Arenosa Creek is a stream in Victoria County and Jackson County, Texas, in the United States. Arenosa is the Spanish word for \"sandy\"." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Jackson_County,
dbr:Victoria_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Argun_\(Caucasus\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Argun (Caucasus)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Argun (Russian: Аргу́н, Chechen: Orga, Georgian: არღუნი - arghuni), also known as Chantiy-Argun, cognate with one of the biggest Chechen teips Chantiy, is a river in the Caucasus. It flows through the northern Caucasus, Georgia, and the Chechen Republic of Russia. It is an affluent of the Sunzha and lies within the river basin of the Terek. It is 148 kilometres (92 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 3,390 square kilometres (1,310 sq mi). The river has its sources on the northern slopes of the Caucasus in Khevsureti, Georgia. The Argun flows in western Chechnya through Itum-Kalinsky and Shatoysky Districts. This area was the first place where Chechens established themselves and many ruins of former villages built in the traditional style can still be seen. The Argun serves as a natural border between the Shalinsky and the Groznensky Districts. The occupation of its valley by the Russians in 1858 was an important event in the last phase of the Murid War. Before the First and Second Chechen Wars the region around the river was populated by numerous farms and houses. The town of Argun is named after the river. On September 7, 2008, the only bridge crossing the Argun River, connecting northern and southern territories of Chechnya, collapsed. Drivers caught on the bridge escaped without injury. A federal road administration representative linked the accident to abnormal stress from heavy military vehicles." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:northern_slopes_of_the_Caucasus ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Russia ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Itum-Kalinsky_and_Shatoysky_Districts ;
wm:length 1.48e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 6.9e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Chantiy-Argun;Orga;arghuni" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Terek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Chechen_Republic_of_Russia .
dbr:Arivaca_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arivaca Creek" ;
wm:abstractText """Arivaca Creek is a small valley stream in southern Pima County, Arizona, that is approximately 5.5 miles (8.9 km) long from its origin in Arivaca Valley to its confluence with the Brawley Wash stream system. As a seasonal stream, Arivaca Creek is perennial for only about two miles most years and experiences its greatest stream-flow during winter and the summer Monsoon season. Most of Arivaca Creek and the riparian corridor it supports is protected as part of the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge (Buenos Aires NWR). A rare swamp-like desert wetland area called Arivaca Cienega is located in the upper reaches of the creek and makes up the easternmost part of the Buenos Aires NWR. Both areas are open to the public for hiking, bird watching and other outdoor recreational activities. The small community of Arivaca, Arizona, is located along the banks of the creek, in between the Arivaca Cienega just east of town and the Arivaca Creek trailhead to the west.
* Sign at the Arivaca Creek traihead.
* Arivaca Creek, near the ruins of the historic Wilbur Ranch House.
* Lizard along the trail.""" ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Brawley_Wash_stream_system ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Arivaca_Valley ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Pima_County ;
wm:length 8.851392e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arizona .
dbr:Armand_Bayou a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Armand Bayou" ;
wm:abstractText "Armand Bayou is a bayou in U.S. State of Texas. It runs near Galveston Bay in Pasadena and the Clear Lake Area. The bayou is best known for the Armand Bayou Nature Center, through which it runs. The bayou and the nature center were named for Armand Yramategui, former curator of the Burke Baker Planetarium and environmental leader during the 1960s. State Representative Dennis Paul, before he took office, was among those who worked with community leaders to clean up the bayou before the United States Environmental Protection Agency ordered a national solution to what Paul otherwise viewed as \"a local problem.\"" ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Armstrong_Creek_\(West_Virginia\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Armstrong Creek (West Virginia)" ;
wm:abstractText "Armstrong Creek is a tributary of the Kanawha River, 8.6 miles (13.8 km) long, in southern West Virginia in the United States. Via the Kanawha and Ohio rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining an area of 22.8 square miles (59 km2) on the unglaciated portion of the Allegheny Plateau. The creek flows for its entire length in western Fayette County; its tributaries additionally drain a small portion of eastern Kanawha County. Armstrong Creek is formed approximately 1.3 miles (2.1 km) southwest of the unincorporated community of McDunn by the confluence of the Left Fork Armstrong Creek, 2.9 miles (4.7 km) long, which rises approximately 1.7 miles (2.7 km) north-northeast of the unincorporated community of Westerly; and the Right Fork Armstrong Creek, 2.5 miles (4.0 km) long, which rises approximately 1.4 miles (2.3 km) north-northeast of Westerly. Both headwaters forks flow generally north-northwestward, and from their confluence Armstrong Creek flows generally north-northeastward through the unincorporated communities of Elkridge, Powellton, Columbia, and Kimberly, to Mount Carbon, where it flows into the Kanawha River. The creek is paralleled by county roads for most of its course. The Geographic Names Information System lists \"Armstrong's Creek\" as a historical variant name for the creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:approximately_1.7_miles_2.7_km_north-northeast_of_the_unincorporated_community_of_Westerly_for_Left_Fork_Armstrong_Creek_and_approximately_1.4_miles_2.3_km_north-northeast_of_Westerly_for_Right_Fork_Armstrong_Creek ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Left_Fork_Armstrong_Creek,
dbr:Right_Fork_Armstrong_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Fayette_County_Kanawha_County ;
wm:length 1.384036e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.911096e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Armstrong's Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Kanawha_River_Ohio_River_Mississippi_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
dbr:Armstrong_River_\(Minnesota\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Armstrong River (Minnesota)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Armstrong River is a river of Minnesota. Armstrong River was named for a mining prospector." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:Minnesota .
dbr:Army_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Army Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Army Creek is a 4-mile (6.4 km) long river in northern Delaware in the United States that drains about 10 square miles (26 km2). The stream is controlled by a floodgate just downstream of DE 9 that does not allow tidal influence of the stream. The source of Army Creek is near the eastern edge of Bear, Delaware in the south and New Castle County Airport in the north. The water then flows ENE to the Delaware River about 1 mile (1.6 km) SW of New Castle, Delaware, at Dobbinsville. Most of the watershed is urban/residential. The watershed is the scene of two Superfund sites owing to the urban/industrial history." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Delaware_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_the_eastern_edge_of_Bear_Delaware_in_the_south_and_New_Castle_County_Airport_in_the_north ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:New_Castle_County ;
wm:length 6.437376e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Delaware_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Arnell_Creek_\(Love_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arnell Creek (Love Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arnell Creek is a 3.09 mi (4.97 km) long 1st order tributary to Love Creek, in Sussex County, Delaware." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sussex_County ;
wm:length 3.363529e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Rehoboth_Bay ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Arnold_Creek_\(Huntington_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arnold Creek (Huntington Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arnold Creek is a tributary of Huntington Creek in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 5.2 miles (8.4 km) long and flows through Ross Township. The watershed of the creek has an area of 4.72 square miles (12.2 km2) and has no named tributaries, but three unnamed tributaries. The creek is considered to be Class A Wild Trout Waters for its entire length. Brook trout naturally reproduce in it and beech trees occur along it. At least two bridges have been built over the creek, one of which carries Pennsylvania Route 118. A portion of it is in the Pennsylvania State Game Lands Number 206." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Luzerne_County ;
wm:length 8.368589e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.84988e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Huntington Creek tributary" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Huntington_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Arnold_Creek_\(West_Virginia\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arnold Creek (West Virginia)" ;
wm:abstractText """Arnold Creek is a tributary of Middle Island Creek, 10.9 miles (17.5 km) long, in West Virginia in the United States. Via Middle Island Creek and the Ohio River, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining an area of 34.7 square miles (90 km2) in a rural region on the unglaciated portion of the Allegheny Plateau. Arnold Creek is formed in western Doddridge County, approximately 2.4 miles (3.9 km) southwest of West Union, by the confluence of its left and right forks:
* the Left Fork Arnold Creek, 4.9 miles (7.9 km) long, which rises in Doddridge County approximately 2.2 miles (3.5 km) west-northwest of Middle Point and flows generally northward
* the Right Fork Arnold Creek, 4.6 miles (7.4 km) long, which rises in Doddridge County approximately 2.1 miles (3.4 km) northeast of Oxford and flows northeastward. From this confluence, Arnold Creek flows generally northward through western Doddridge County. Near its mouth, it flows into southern Tyler County for a short distance, returns to Doddridge County, and flows into Middle Island Creek from the south on the boundary of Doddridge and Tyler counties, approximately 0.9 miles (1.4 km) east-northeast of the unincorporated community of . According to the Geographic Names Information System, the creek has also been known historically by the spelling "Arnolds Creek.\"""" ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:western_Doddridge_County_approximately_2.4_miles_3.9_km_southwest_of_West_Union ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Left_Fork_Arnold_Creek,
dbr:Right_Fork_Arnold_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Doddridge_County,
dbr:Tyler_County ;
wm:length 1.754185e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.218944e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Arnolds Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mississippi_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:West_Virginia .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arrow Creek (Fergus County, Montana)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arrow Creek (Gros Ventre: ʔɔ́ciníícááh, lit. 'arrow river') is a tributary of the Missouri River in Montana in the United States. Approximately 45 miles (73 km) long, it rises in the Lewis and Clark National Forest near in the Highwood Mountains in southern Chouteau County. It flows south then east, then northeast and joins the Missouri in the on the border between Chouteau and Fergus counties." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Missouri_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Lewis_and_Clark_National_Forest ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Chouteau_County,
dbr:Fergus_County ;
wm:length 7.24203e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 7.409688e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "ʔɔ́ciníícááh" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Montana .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arrow Creek (Fresno County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arrow Creek is a stream in Kings Canyon National Park in Fresno County, California, United States. It is a tributary of the South Fork Kings River." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Fresno_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.108911e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:South_Fork_Kings_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Bayo a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Bayo" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Bayo is an 8-mile-long (13 km) perennial stream which flows northwestly along Mount Hamilton Road east of Mt. Hamilton in the Diablo Range. It is part of the southern Alameda Creek watershed in Santa Clara County, California." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Clara_County ;
wm:length 1.287472e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.510784e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Alameda_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Calabasas a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Calabasas" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Calabasas (also known as Calabasas Creek) is a 7.0-mile-long (11.3 km) tributary of the Los Angeles River, in the southwestern San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles County in California." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Los_Angeles_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Los_Angeles_County ;
wm:length 1.126538e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Calabasas Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Los_Angeles_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Colorado a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Colorado" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Colorado is a river in Hidalgo, Cameron and Willacy Counties, Texas, that flows mostly eastward some 89 miles (143 km) from Lake Llano Grande into the Laguna Madre. Arroyo Colorado is a name derived from Spanish meaning \"red creek bed\"." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Laguna_Madre ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Lake_Llano_Grande ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Hidalgo_Cameron_and_Willacy_Counties ;
wm:length 1.432313e+05 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Arroyo_Conejo a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Conejo" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Conejo (Spanish for “Rabbit Creek”) is the longest creek in the Conejo Valley, sprawling over the cities of Thousand Oaks and Camarillo, and the communities of Newbury Park, Casa Conejo and Santa Rosa Valley. Arroyo Conejo is the primary drainage for the City of Thousand Oaks. Its watershed covers 57 square miles (150 km2) of which 43 square miles (110 km2) are in the Conejo Valley and 14 square miles (36 km2) in the Santa Rosa Valley. It is an ancient creek, which, historically, was a seasonal-running creek. The arroyo is today perennial due to urban runoff from irrigation. Its north fork carved Wildwood Canyon out of bedrock over several millennia. Paradise Falls in Wildwood Regional Park has been described as perhaps the \"most visual representation\" of the arroyo today. The south fork originates in the Conejo Hills above Newbury Park. It also follows Thousand Oaks Boulevard, where it runs directly along and below the boulevard. In certain areas, the creek runs through concrete culverts and runs underneath the street. Past Newbury Park's Hill Canyon, the creek meets with in Santa Rosa Valley as it runs through the Pleasant Valley basin on its way to its estuary at Mugu Lagoon. Due to limited access, suggestions have been made to make its banks into public amenities similar to that of San Antonio River Walk, or, developing a public use trail following the creek, similar to the bike path of Arroyo Simi in Simi Valley, California. It is part of the Calleguas Creek watershed, which drains an area of 343 sq. mi. in southern Ventura County. Within Wildwood Regional Park, its gorge and its 40-foot (12 m) cascade, Paradise Falls, are among the park’s most visited attractions." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Mugu_Lagoon ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Ventura_County ;
wm:otherNames "Rabbit Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem .
dbr:Arroyo_Dolores a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Dolores" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Dolores (Spanish for Our Lady of Sorrow Creek) is a river in San Francisco, California that has been largely culverted. The only remaining portion above ground is in the Mission Creek Channel that drains into China Basin." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Mission_Creek_Channel ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:otherNames "Our Lady of Sorrow Creek" ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Grande_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Grande Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Grande Creek is a major stream in San Luis Obispo County on the Central Coast of California. The creek flows 22 miles (35 km) in a southwesterly direction, from the Santa Lucia Range to the Pacific Ocean. It is a major source of water supply for southern San Luis Obispo County. The creek's name is derived from the Spanish for \"large watercourse\", and was sometimes called the \"Roaring Grande\" in the 19th century due to its propensity for flooding. The city of Arroyo Grande, established in 1867, was named after the stream." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Santa_Lucia_Range ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:San_Luis_Obispo_County ;
wm:length 3.540557e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Roaring Grande" ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Hondo_\(Santa_Clara_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Hondo (Santa Clara County)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Hondo is a northwestward-flowing 13.0-mile-long (20.9 km) river in Santa Clara County, California, United States, that lies east of Milpitas. The area is privately owned by the San Francisco Water Department and is closed to public access because of its usage as drinking water. Bounded to the east by Oak Ridge and to the west by Poverty Ridge, Arroyo Hondo empties into the Calaveras Reservoir where it joins Calaveras Creek. It is formed by the confluence of Smith Creek and Isabel Creek which drain the west and east slopes of Mount Hamilton, respectively." ;
wm:hasMouth ,
;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Isabel_Creek,
dbr:Smith_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Clara_County ;
wm:length 2.092142e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.350008e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Calaveras_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Las_Positas a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Las Positas" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Las Positas is a 7.4-mile-long (11.9 km) westward-flowing watercourse in Alameda County, California, which begins at the confluence of Arroyo Seco and Cayetano Creek north of Livermore, and empties into Arroyo Mocho in Dublin, California." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:north_of_Livermore ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Arroyo_Seco,
dbr:Cayetano_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Alameda_County ;
wm:length 1.190912e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.060704e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Arroyo_Mocho ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_León a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo León" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo León (Spanish for \"Lion Creek\") is a 6.5-mile-long (10.5 km) stream in San Mateo County, California which is a tributary of Pilarcitos Creek." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:San_Mateo_County ;
wm:length 1.046071e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Lion Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Pilarcitos_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Seco_\(Alameda_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Seco (Alameda County)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Seco is an 11.7-mile-long (18.8 km) watercourse in Alameda County, California, that traverses through the city of Livermore, emptying into Arroyo Las Positas. Arroyo Seco means \"dry stream\" in Spanish. Arroyo Seco lies above the Arroyo Seco watershed, which includes the eastern part of the city of Livermore and also the Sandia National Laboratory. The Mocho Subbasin is the largest of the subbasins in the Livermore Valley watershed. This subbasin is bounded to the west by the Zone and to the east by the Tesla Fault. Some groundwater flow occurs across these fault boundaries, but flows are discontinuous below a depth of 50 feet (15 m) across the Tesla Fault and south of the Arroyo Mocho channel across the Livermore Fault. A number of threatened and endangered species reside in this watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Alameda_County ;
wm:length 1.882928e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.469136e+02 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Seco_\(Los_Angeles_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Seco (Los Angeles County)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Arroyo Seco, meaning \"dry stream\" in Spanish, is a 24.9-mile-long (40.1 km) seasonal river, canyon, watershed, and cultural area in Los Angeles County, California. The area was explored by Gaspar de Portolà who named the stream Arroyo Seco as this canyon had the least water of any he had seen. During this exploration he met the Chief Hahamog-na (Hahamonga) of the Tongva Indians." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Los_Angeles_County ;
wm:length 4.007267e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.20496e+01 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Seco_\(Salinas_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Seco (Salinas River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Arroyo Seco (\"dry wash\") is a major tributary of the Salinas River in central California. About 40 miles (64 km) long, it drains a rugged area of the Coast Ranges east of Big Sur before flowing through the agricultural Salinas Valley." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 6.437376e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.99872e+01 ;
wm:otherNames "Arroyo Seco" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Salinas_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Seco_\(Sonoma_County\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Seco (Sonoma County)" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Seco is a 6.9-mile-long (11.1 km) tributary stream to Schell Creek in southern Sonoma County, California, United States. In Spanish arroyo seco means \"dry creek\". Arroyo Seco Creek drains a portion of the western slopes of the southern Mayacamas Mountains. Its 11.4-square-mile (30 km2) watershed, along with the entire Mayacamas mountain block, was formed in the Miocene era by volcanic action and with tectonic uplift about 12 million years ago. Soils of the immediate streambed and its vicinity are classified as the riverwash series, recent deposition of sands and gravels. Arroyo Seco Creek springs near the Napa County line about 4 mi (6 km) northeast of Sonoma, California. It flows southward, emerging from near Sonoma Valley Hospital. After a confluence with Haraszthy Creek, it crosses under State Route 12 near Schellville, California, where it flows into Schell Creek. Schell Creek discharges to a network of sloughs that eventually empty into Sonoma Creek, which in turn empties into the Napa Sonoma Marsh and San Pablo Bay." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Schell_Creek ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_the_Napa_County_line_about_4_mi_6_km_northeast_of_Sonoma_California ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Haraszthy_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sonoma_County ;
wm:length 1.110445e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.9624e+00 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Schell_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Simi a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Simi" ;
wm:abstractText "The Arroyo Simi (Spanish for \"Small Stream of Simi\", sometimes also referred to as Simi Creek) is a 19-mile (31 km) westwards-running creek, located in California, United States, running from the city of Simi Valley and crosses the valley from east to west, before entering the city of Moorpark. It originates at Corriganville Park by the Santa Susana Pass, and streams westwards into Moorpark where it merges with by Hitch Road. It extends for 12 miles (19 km) through the Simi Valley, and leaves the city limits by Oak Park at the western end Simi Valley, and continues for seven miles in Moorpark. It is a tributary to the Calleguas Creek, which enters the Pacific Ocean by its estuary at Mugu Lagoon by Naval Air Station Point Mugu. Besides an arroyo, it has been described as a channel, waterway, river, drain, wash, and stream. Arroyo Simi drains an area of 343 square miles in southern Ventura County. In its natural state, it is an ephemeral creek, which is only seasonally filled during winter time and periods of heavy rain. Today it is for the most part a concrete lined water drain that flows year round. Tributaries to the Arroyo Simi includes Alamos Canyon-, Sycamore-, Dry Canyon-, Tapo Canyon-, Las Llajas Canyon-, White Oak-, Runkle Canyon-, and Bus Canyon Creeks, as well as the Erringer Road- and North Simi Drains. Arroyo Simi Greenway is an ongoing construction project by the City of Simi Valley in order to increase the recreational use of its river parkways. The project includes new paved hiking- and biking trails along the Arroyo Simi, exhibit signs, sixteen new trail entries, and more. The area is administrated as the Arroyo Simi Bike Path by the Rancho Simi Recreation and Park District (RSRPD). It is home to native flora, fish, and avifauna. It is home to fish species such as the brown bullhead, green sunfish, bluntnose minnow, and mosquitofish. It is an important habitat for various species of freshwater-nesting birds in the Simi Valley. Some of the species include the great blue heron, white-faced ibis, black-crowned night heron, green heron, black-necked stilt, great egret, snowy egret, belted kingfisher, black phoebe, killdeer, common yellowthroat, greater yellowlegs, American coot, and mallard." ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Corriganville_Park ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Ventura_County ;
wm:length 3.057754e+04 ;
wm:otherNames "Simi Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_Viejo a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo Viejo" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo Viejo is a westward flowing 5.1 miles (8.2 km) creek that begins in the Oakland Hills in Alameda County, California, and joins just before entering San Leandro Bay, a part of eastern San Francisco Bay." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Oakland_Hills ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Alameda_County ;
wm:length 8.207634e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.048e-01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:San_Francisco_Bay ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Arroyo_de_en_Medio a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Arroyo de en Medio" ;
wm:abstractText "Arroyo de en Medio (Spanish for \"in the middle creek\") is a 2.5-mile-long (4.0 km) coastal stream in western San Mateo County, California. Arroyo de en Medio rises on the western slopes of Montara Mountain and discharges to the Pacific Ocean at Half Moon Bay at the location of the unincorporated community of Miramar at Miramar Beach. The watershed of Arroyo de en Medio consists of relatively permeable sandy soils capable of significant recharge to its aquifers, which supply considerable potable water to the local area. Arroyo is Spanish for creek; de en Medio means literally \"of in between\" but a closer more functional translation may be in the middle." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Pacific_Ocean ;
wm:hasSource dbr:western_slopes_of_Montara_Mountain ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:San_Mateo_County ;
wm:length 4.02335e+03 ;
wm:otherNames "in the middle creek;in the middle" ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Artichoke_Creek_\(South_Dakota\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Artichoke Creek (South Dakota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Artichoke Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Artichoke Creek was named on account of the wild artichokes along its course." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Artichoke_River_\(Massachusetts\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Artichoke River (Massachusetts)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Artichoke River (1.2 miles (1.9 km)long), is a tributary of the Merrimack River in Massachusetts in the United States. It is in Essex County, Massachusetts, and flows generally north, marking the boundary between West Newbury and Newburyport. The Upper and Lower Artichoke reservoirs are impoundments of the river that acts as a water source for nearby towns.Despite the short length of the river, there are three dams along its course, the Emory Lane Dam, the Lower Artichoke Dam and the Upper Artichoke Dam.The river is named for the Jerusalem Artichoke, which had been harvested nearby by Native Americans and early settlers." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Merrimack_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Essex_County ;
wm:length 1.931213e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Merrimack_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Massachusetts .
dbr:Ash_Clove_Brook a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Clove Brook" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Clove Brook is a river in Delaware County, New York. It flows into Trout Brook southeast of ." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Delaware_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.919472e+02 ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Ash_Creek_\(Arizona\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Creek (Arizona)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Creek is located in southeastern Arizona in the Pinaleño Mountain Range, part of Coronado National Forest. The closest city is Safford, about 7 miles (11 km) away." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arizona .
dbr:Ash_Creek_\(California\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Creek (California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Creek is a 35-mile (56 km) long stream located to the east of the Cascade Range in northeastern California, flowing through Lassen County and Modoc County. It drains a semi-arid watershed composed mainly of volcanic hills and agricultural valleys. It originates as a number of springs in the Ash Valley, in the Modoc National Forest, about 5 miles (8.0 km) west of Madeline in Lassen County. It flows northwest through a canyon into Ambrose Valley, past the Ash Creek Campground, then crosses into Modoc County and enters Round Valley where it turns southwest. At Adin, the creek is crossed by Highway 299 after passing through a gap in the hills into the much larger Big Valley, where it flows west roughly along the Modoc-Lassen county line. Near its terminus the creek feeds an extensive wetlands area known as Big Swamp, part of the Ash Creek State Wildlife Area. The creek joins with the Pit River on the western end of the swamp, about 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Bieber. Although located in a semi-desert region the flow of Ash Creek is perennial. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife calls Ash Creek \"one of the most remote, least improved and most pristine\" wildlife areas in California. There are about 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) of wetlands which provide habitat for many species of mammals, waterfowl and birds of prey. The upper part of the creek, in the Modoc National Forest, is stocked annually with fish." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Ash_Valley ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lassen_County_and_Modoc_County ;
wm:length 5.632704e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.259129e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Pit_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Ash_Creek_\(Minnesota\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Creek (Minnesota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Creek is a stream in Rock County, Minnesota, in the United States. It is a tributary of the Rock River. Ash Creek was named from the white ash trees lining its banks." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Rock_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Rock_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Minnesota .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Creek (Polk County, Oregon)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Creek is a short stream in Polk County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. Formed by the merger of its north and middle forks near Monmouth, it flows generally east to meet the Willamette River at Independence. The creek passes under Oregon Route 51 just before entering the river. The creek's mouth is about 95 miles (153 km) upstream of the Willamette's confluence with the Columbia River. North Fork Ash Creek begins at the eastern edge of the Central Oregon Coast Range near Dallas at 44°54′35″N 123°21′44″W / 44.90972°N 123.36222°W and flows generally southeast to meet the Middle Fork. Middle Fork Ash Creek begins at 44°53′26″N 123°17′37″W / 44.89056°N 123.29361°W near Mount Pisgah and flows generally east. Both forks pass under Oregon Route 99W shortly before they merge to form the main stem. Ash Creek is joined by a third fork, South Fork Ash Creek, in Independence. The South Fork begins at 44°52′36″N 123°18′28″W / 44.87667°N 123.30778°W slightly south of the Middle Fork and flows generally east to meet the main stem at 44°51′13″N 123°11′36″W / 44.85361°N 123.19333°W The South Fork passes under Route 99W south of Monmouth and under Route 51 in Independence. None of the three forks has a named tributary. Before alterations by settlers in the 19th century, the basin was a \"boggy, 'braided' marsh with many small creeks spilling into Ash Creek\" and the river. European-Americans drained and leveled wetlands and riparian zones for farming, logging, housing, and urban development." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:eastern_edge_of_the_Central_Oregon_Coast_Range_near_Dallas ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Polk_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.1148e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Willamette_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Ash_Creek_\(Utah\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Creek (Utah)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Creek is a stream northern Washington County, Utah. It is a tributary of the Virgin River. Ash Creek was named after the ash timber near its course." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Washington_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Virgin_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Utah .
dbr:Ash_Gut_\(Murderkill_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Gut (Murderkill River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Gut is a 2.07 mi (3.33 km) long 2nd order tributary to the Murderkill River in Kent County, Delaware." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Kent_County ;
wm:length 3.331342e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Ash_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ash River is a river of Minnesota. Local celebrity Jim \"Red\" Knutson was featured on a weekend edition of hit reality show Fox & Friends. The land surrounding the river was part of the ancient Lake Agassiz. The Ash River is 29 mi (47 km) long. Portions of the river are a designated trout stream." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.667086e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Minnesota .
dbr:Ash_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ash Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Ash Run is a river in Delaware County, New York. It flows into Trout Brook north-northeast of Shinhopple." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Delaware_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.340608e+02 ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Ashaway_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashaway River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ashaway River is a river in the U.S. states of Rhode Island and Connecticut. It flows approximately 4 km (2 mi). There are three dams along the river's length." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 6.43736e+03 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Connecticut,
dbr:Rhode_Island .
dbr:Ashby_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashby Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ashby Creek is a tributary of in Upper Freehold Township, Monmouth County, New Jersey, in the United States. It runs for 4.2 miles (6.8 km) from the area near Wrightsville and empties into Doctors Creek southeast of Allentown." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Doctors_Creek ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Wrightsville ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Monmouth_County ;
wm:length 6.759245e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.01168e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Delaware_River_system ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Jersey .
dbr:Ashelman_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashelman Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Ashelman Run is a tributary of Coles Creek in Columbia County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 0.7 miles (1.1 km) long and flows through Sugarloaf Township. The stream's watershed has an area of 0.57 square miles (1.5 km2). The stream is designated as a Coldwater Fishery. It is named after Daniel Ashelman, who lived in the area in the early 1800s. Glacial till and other geological features can be found in the vicinity of the stream. It has one unnamed tributary and there are two lakes in the watershed." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Columbia_County ;
wm:length 1.126541e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.148584e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Coles_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Ashepoo_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashepoo River" ;
wm:abstractText "Ashepoo River is a short blackwater river in South Carolina, United States. It rises in a confluence of swamps south of Walterboro, flows in a southeast direction and empties into Saint Helena Sound at 32°29′24″N 80°25′26″W / 32.49°N 80.42389°W. The entire course of the river lies within the boundaries of Colleton County. The Ashepoo basin forms part of the ACE Basin, a coastal conservation area that encompasses its bottomlands confluence with the Combahee and Edisto river basins. (The refuge's name is formed from the first letters of the names of the three rivers: A-C-E). Many people enjoy fishing and boating on the Ashepoo River and others in South Carolina. The name comes from the Ashepoo subtribe of the Cusabo Indians. Caeser P. Chisolm received a charter to operate ferry service across the Ashepoo River." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Saint_Helena_Sound ;
wm:hasSource dbr:confluence_of_swamps_south_of_Walterboro ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Colleton_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:ACE_Basin ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Carolina .
dbr:Ashland_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashland Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Ashland Creek is a 5.4-mile (8.7 km) tributary of Bear Creek in the U.S. state of Oregon. It joins Bear Creek near Ashland, 21 miles (34 km) from the larger stream's confluence with the Rogue River. The main stem of Ashland Creek begins at Reeder Reservoir, an artificial impoundment of about 20 acres (8.1 ha) that provides municipal water to the city of Ashland. Two tributaries (forks) of the main stem feed the reservoir. Arising on the flanks of Mount Ashland, East Fork Ashland Creek is 5.8 miles (9.3 km) long, and West Fork Ashland Creek is 5.3 miles (8.5 km) long. The forks flow generally north through the Rogue River – Siskiyou National Forest to the reservoir. Below the reservoir, the main stem continues north through a canyon, then through a channel confined by urban development and into the broad alluvial valley of Bear Creek. The stream gradient averages about 9 percent on the upper reaches and 3 percent within the city." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:flanks_of_Mount_Ashland ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 8.690458e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.239512e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Bear_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Oregon .
dbr:Ashley_Creek_\(Minnesota\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashley Creek (Minnesota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Ashley Creek is a 28.3-mile-long (45.5 km) tributary of the Sauk River in central Minnesota, United States, joining the Sauk just north of Sauk Centre. It is part of the Mississippi River watershed. Ashley Creek was named in the 1850s for Ossian Doolittle Ashley, a Boston stockbroker." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Sauk_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.554432e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Sauk_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Minnesota .
dbr:Ashnola_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashnola River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ashnola River is a tributary of the Similkameen River, rising in the northeastern part of the North Cascades in Washington, United States, and flowing north into British Columbia, Canada, to join the Similkameen River about halfway along that river's course between the towns of Princeton and Keremeos. The river crosses the international boundary at 49°00′00″N 120°19′37″W / 49.00000°N 120.32694°W and transits Cathedral Provincial Park. It has one main tributary, Ewart Creek, which is about 25 kilometres (16 mi) long and begins virtually at the border and is entirely within Cathedral Park. A gravel road from its junction with BC Highway 3 at the locality of Ashnola flanking the river is the main, and virtually only, road access to the park. The locality of Ashnola was that of a mining camp from the days of the many gold rushes in the Similkameen Country and also the site of the Ashnola Indian Reserve (attached to the Lower Similkameen Indian Band)." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Similkameen_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:northeastern_part_of_the_North_Cascades ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Ewart_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Similkameen_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Washington .
dbr:Ashtabula_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashtabula River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ashtabula River is a river located northeast of Cleveland in Ohio. The river flows into Lake Erie at the city of Ashtabula, Ohio. It is 40 miles (64 km) in length and drains 137 square miles (350 km2)." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Erie ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 6.437376e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.740408e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Lake_Erie ;
wm:traverses dbr:Ohio .
dbr:Ashuelot_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ashuelot River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ashuelot River is a tributary of the Connecticut River, approximately 64 miles (103 km) long, in southwestern New Hampshire in the United States. It drains a mountainous area of 425 square miles (1,101 km2), including much of the area known as the Monadnock Region. It is the longest tributary of the Connecticut River within New Hampshire." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.02998e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 5.7e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Connecticut_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Hampshire .
dbr:Asketum_Branch_\(Tyndall_Branch_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Asketum Branch (Tyndall Branch tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Asketum Branch is a 2.23 mi (3.59 km) long 1st order tributary to Tyndall Branch, in Sussex County, Delaware." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sussex_County ;
wm:length 3.588837e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.144e+00 ;
wm:otherNames "Asketum Branch" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Nanticoke_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Aspen_Brook_\(Colorado\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aspen Brook (Colorado)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aspen Brook is a 3.9-mile-long (6.3 km) tributary of the Big Thompson River in Larimer County, Colorado. The stream's source is near Wind River Pass. It flows north to a confluence with the Big Thompson in Rocky Mountain National Park." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:confluence_with_the_Big_Thompson ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_Wind_River_Pass ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Larimer_County ;
wm:length 6.276426e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.371039e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Big_Thompson_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Colorado .
dbr:Aspetuck_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aspetuck River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Aspetuck River is a 17.0-mile-long (27.4 km) river in the U.S. state of Connecticut. The river rises in the hills located in in Bethel, with a watershed of approximately 430 acres (170 ha). The river flows generally southerly through Redding, Connecticut to the Aspetuck Reservoir, the in Easton and Fairfield and finally into the Saugatuck River in Westport, Connecticut and then into the Long Island Sound. It flows through the village of Aspetuck at an average depth of 2.5 feet (0.76 m). The word Aspetuck can be translated as \"river originating at the high place\" in an Algonquian language." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Saugatuck_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Bethel ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.735878e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Saugatuck_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Connecticut .
dbr:Assa_\(river\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Assa (river)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Assa (Tsirtslovn-Tskhali, Russian: Асса, Цирцловн-Цхали, Georgian: ასა, Chechen: Iaьса-хи, Ingush: Эса-хий) is a right tributary of the Sunzha in Georgia and Russia. It is located in Dusheti Municipality of Mtskheta-Mtianeti, Georgia; and in Dzheyrakhsky and Sunzhensky Districts of Ingushetia and in Sunzhensky and Achkhoy-Martanovsky Districts of Chechnya, Russia." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Sunzha ;
wm:inCountry dbr:Georgia_Russia ;
wm:length 1.33e+05 ;
wm:otherNames "Tsirtslovn-Tskhali;Асса;Цирцловн-Цхали;ასა;Iaьса-хи;Эса-хий" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Sunzha .
dbr:Assabet_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Assabet River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Assabet River is a small, 34.4-mile (55.4 km) long river located about 20 miles (30 km) west of Boston, Massachusetts, United States. The Assabet rises from a swampy area known as the Assabet Reservoir in Westborough, Massachusetts, and flows northeast before merging with the Sudbury River at Egg Rock in Concord, Massachusetts, to become the Concord River. The Organization for the Assabet, Sudbury and Concord Rivers (OARS), headquartered in West Concord, Massachusetts, is a non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation, protection, and enhancement of the natural and recreational features of these three rivers and their watershed. As the Concord River is a tributary of the Merrimack River, it and the Assabet and Sudbury rivers are part of the larger Merrimack River watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Egg_Rock_in_Concord_Massachusetts ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Assabet_Reservoir_in_Westborough_Massachusetts ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 5.536143e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Merrimack_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Massachusetts .
dbr:Assapumpset_Brook a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Assapumpset Brook" ;
wm:abstractText "Assapumpset Brook is a 5.9-mile (9.5 km) long waterway in Johnston, Rhode Island. It feeds the Woonasquatucket River and is considered part of the drainage basin variously termed the Narragansett Watershed or the Woonasquatucket River Watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 9.49513e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.286e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Woonasquatucket_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Rhode_Island .
dbr:Assunpink_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Assunpink Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Assunpink Creek is a 22.9-mile-long (36.9 km) tributary of the Delaware River in western New Jersey in the United States. The name Assunpink is from the Lenape Ahsën'pink, meaning \"stony, watery place\"." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 3.685389e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.144e-01 ;
wm:otherNames "Ahsën'pink" ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Jersey .
dbr:Asylum_Run a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Asylum Run" ;
wm:abstractText "Asylum Run is a 4.2-mile-long (6.8 km) tributary of Paxton Creek in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Asylum Run joins Paxton Creek at the north-easternmost border of Harrisburg at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex. It is a tributary with flashy flows, meaning the water levels can vary greatly with storm events, due to rapid runoff upstream from massive amounts of impervious surfaces in Colonial Park, Penbrook, and adjacent areas." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Paxton_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Dauphin_County ;
wm:length 6.759228e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Paxton_Creek ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atascadero Creek (Santa Barbara County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Atascadero Creek is a southwest flowing stream in Santa Barbara County, California, United States which empties into the Goleta Slough." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Santa_Barbara_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.1336e+00 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atascadero Creek (Sonoma County, California)" ;
wm:abstractText "Atascadero Creek is an 8.8-mile-long (14.2 km) north-flowing stream in Sonoma County, California, United States, which empties into Green Valley Creek." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sonoma_County ;
wm:length 1.416219e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.71272e+01 ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Atascosa_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atascosa River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Atascosa River is a river tributary of the Frio River, which is tributary of the Nueces River in Texas." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Nueces_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Atchuelinguk_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atchuelinguk River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Atchuelinguk River (Yup'ik Ecuilnguq, literally \"clear water\")Atchuelinguk is a 165-mile (266 km) tributary of the Yukon River in the U.S. state of Alaska. It flows southwest from the Nulato Hills through the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge to meet the larger river near Pilot Station." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Nulato_Hills ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.66e+05 ;
wm:otherNames "Yup'ik Ecuilnguq" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Yukon_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Atigun_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atigun River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Atigun River /ˈætəɡən/ is a river in the Endicott Mountains in northern Alaska. The source is a glacier terminus, from which it flows northeast to the Sagavanirktok River 20 miles south of its junction with the . It is 45 miles long." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Sagavanirktok_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Endicott_Mountains ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 7.242048e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 6.21e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Atlasta_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atlasta Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Atlasta Creek is a stream in Valdez–Cordova Census Area, Alaska, in the United States. \"Atlasta Creek took its name from a local roadhouse, that was named when a pioneer woman said in relief, \"At last, a house\" after the first house in the area was completed." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Atterbury_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Atterbury Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Atterbury Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of South Dakota. Atterbury Creek has the name of a local family which settled there." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:traverses dbr:South_Dakota .
dbr:Attoyac_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Attoyac River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Attoyac River (/ˈætəjæk/ AT-ə-yak) is a river in eastern Texas. It flows through Nacogdoches, San Augustine, Shelby and Rusk counties of east Texas. It is a tributary to the Angelina River which it enters within the Sam Rayburn Reservoir." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Angelina_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Nacogdoches_San_Augustine_Shelby_and_Rusk_counties ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Angelina_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Au_Gres_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Au Gres River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Au Gres River is a river in Michigan. Its mouth is at Lake Huron in the city of Au Gres, Michigan. It flows through Arenac, Iosco and Ogemaw counties. It formerly had an eastern branch, which was severed from the parent river and rerouted along the Whitney Drain to Lake Huron north of Au Gres. The main stream is 46.7 miles (75.2 km) long." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Huron ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Arenac,
dbr:Iosco,
dbr:Ogemaw ;
wm:length 7.563917e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Michigan .
dbr:Au_Sable_River_\(Michigan\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Au Sable River (Michigan)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Au Sable River (/ɔː ˈsɑːbəl/ aw SAH-bəl) in Michigan, United States runs approximately 138 miles (222 km) through the northern Lower Peninsula, through the towns of Grayling and Mio, and enters Lake Huron at the town of Oscoda. It is considered one of the best brown trout fisheries east of the Rockies and has been designated a blue ribbon trout stream by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. A map from 1795 located in the United States Gazetteer calls it the Beauais River. In French, the river is called the Rivière au sable, literally \"Sand River\"." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Huron ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 2.220895e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.770888e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Beauais River;Rivière au sable" ;
wm:traverses dbr:Michigan .
dbr:Au_Train_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Au Train River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Au Train River is a 16.8-mile-long (27.0 km) river in Au Train Township, Alger County, Michigan. It rises at the outlet of Cleveland Cliffs Basin, a reservoir, and flows north, passing through Au Train Lake, and entering Lake Superior at the village of Au Train." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Superior ;
wm:hasSource dbr:outlet_of_Cleveland_Cliffs_Basin ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Alger_County ;
wm:length 2.703691e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Michigan .
dbr:Aughwick_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aughwick Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aughwick Creek is a 30.8-mile-long (49.6 km) tributary of the Juniata River in Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Aughwick Creek, born from the confluence of Little Aughwick Creek and Sideling Hill Creek near the community of , joins the Juniata River a few miles below Mount Union." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Juniata_River ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Little_Aughwick_Creek,
dbr:Sideling_Hill_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Huntingdon_County ;
wm:length 4.956767e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Juniata_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Augustine_Creek_\(Delaware_Bay_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Augustine Creek (Delaware Bay tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Augustine Creek is a 4.54 mi (7.31 km) long tributary of Delaware Bay in New Castle County, Delaware. Augustine Creek is tidal for most of its course." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:New_Castle_County ;
wm:length 7.306422e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Delaware .
dbr:Aukerman_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aukerman Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aukerman Creek is a stream in Preble County, Ohio. The 5.6-mile (9.0 km) long stream is a tributary of Twin Creek. Aukerman Creek bears the name of an early settler." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Twin_Creek ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Preble_County ;
wm:length 9.012304e+03 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Ohio .
dbr:Aunt_Clara_Fork a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aunt Clara Fork" ;
wm:abstractText "Aunt Clara Fork is a 7.39 mi (11.89 km) long 3rd order tributary to Kings Creek in Washington County, Pennsylvania." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Washington_County ;
wm:length 1.189305e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.538984e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Aunts_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aunts Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aunts Creek is a stream in Stone County in the Ozarks of southwest Missouri. Alternate names include Ance Creek and Ants Creek. The source area for the stream lies just west of Missouri Route 76 north of Lakeview. The stream flows west-southwest and then southwest to enter the Aunts Creek arm of Table Rock Lake at Aunts Creek Park on Missouri Route DD northwest of Kimberling City. The headwaters of Wilson Run lie just north of Route 76 and Aunts Creek. Aunts Creek has the name of \"Aunt\" China Bowman, a pioneer citizen." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Aunts_Creek_arm_of_Table_Rock_Lake ;
wm:hasSource dbr:just_west_of_Missouri_Route_76_north_of_Lakeview ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Stone_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.84988e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Ance Creek;Ants Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Table_Rock_Lake ;
wm:traverses dbr:Missouri .
dbr:Auries_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Auries Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Auries Creek flows into the Mohawk River in Auriesville, New York." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:mouthElevation 8.35152e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mohawk_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Ausable_River_\(New_York\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ausable River (New York)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Ausable River (/ɔːˈseɪbəl/), also known as AuSable River and originally written as \"Au Sable\", runs in the U.S. state of New York, from the Adirondack Mountains and past the village of Lake Placid and Au Sable Forks to empty into Lake Champlain (at 44°33′40″N 73°25′25″W / 44.56111°N 73.42361°W). It has an East and West branch that join at Au Sable Forks. The river forms a partial boundary between Clinton County and Essex County. The Ausable River is known for its gorge, Ausable Chasm, located a few miles east of Keeseville. The Ausable River is 94 miles (150 km) long and drains a watershed of 516 square miles (1,340 km2). It was originally named \"Au Sable\" (French for \"sandy\") by Samuel de Champlain when he first explored the region in 1609 because of its extensive sandy delta." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lake_Champlain ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Adirondack_Mountains ;
wm:inCountry ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Clinton_County,
dbr:Essex_County ;
wm:length 1.51278e+05 ;
wm:otherNames "AuSable River;Au Sable" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Lake_Champlain ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Austin_Bayou a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Austin Bayou" ;
wm:abstractText "Austin Bayou is a small waterway in Brazoria County, in the U.S. state of Texas. The bayou is named for Stephen F. Austin, the founder of Texas." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Brazoria_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Austin_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Austin Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Austin Creek is a 16.0-mile-long (25.7 km) southward-flowing stream in the mountains of western Sonoma County, California which empties into the Russian River about 4 miles (6 km) from the Pacific Ocean." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:mountains_of_western_Sonoma_County_California ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Sonoma_County ;
wm:length 2.574944e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 7.0104e+00 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Russian_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:California .
dbr:Authion a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Authion" ;
wm:abstractText "The Authion is a 99.8 km (62.0 mi) long river in western France located in the departments of Indre-et-Loire (Centre-Val de Loire) and Maine-et-Loire (Pays de la Loire). It is a tributary of the river Loire on the right side. It flows into the Loire in Sainte-Gemmes-sur-Loire, near Angers. Its longest tributaries are the and the . The largest towns on the Authion are Bourgueil, Mazé-Milon, Brain-sur-l'Authion, Trélazé and Les Ponts-de-Cé. Its basin area is 1,497 km2 (578 sq mi)." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Loire ;
wm:inCountry dbr:France ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Indre-et-Loire_Maine-et-Loire ;
wm:length 9.98e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Loire .
dbr:Avents_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Avents Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Avents Creek is a 7.60 mi (12.23 km) long 2nd order tributary to the Cape Fear River in Harnett County, North Carolina. This is the only stream of this name in the United States. The lower reaches flow through Raven Rock State Park." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Harnett_County ;
wm:length 1.223101e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.62712e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Avingak_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Avingak Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Avingak Creek is a stream in North Slope Borough, Alaska, in the United States. It is a tributary of the Kokolik River. Avingak is derived from the Eskimo word meaning \"lemming\", and the abundance of lemmings at the creek caused its name to be selected." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Kokolik_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:North_Slope_Borough ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Awuna_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Awuna River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Awuna River also called Sakvailak by the Iñupiat is a 200-mile (320 km) tributary of the Colville River in the U.S. state of Alaska. Located entirely within the National Petroleum Reserve, it arises in a swamp north of Lookout Ridge in the North Slope Borough. It flows generally east to meet the larger river west of Angoyakvik Pass." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:a_swamp_north_of_Lookout_Ridge ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:North_Slope_Borough ;
wm:length 3.218688e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.200656e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Sakvailak" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Colville_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Ayish_Bayou a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Ayish Bayou" ;
wm:abstractText "Ayish Bayou is a river in Texas. Ayish Bayou begins about 7 miles (11 km) north of San Augustine in northern San Augustine County. The course of the stream runs southeast for 47 miles (76 km) through the center of the county, before discharging into the Angelina River in northern Jasper County, Texas" ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Angelina_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:about_7_miles_11_km_north_of_San_Augustine ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Jasper_County,
dbr:San_Augustine_County ;
wm:length 7.563917e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Aylesworth_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Aylesworth Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Aylesworth Creek is a tributary of the Lackawanna River in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 4.9 miles (7.9 km) long and flows through Carbondale Township and the boroughs of Mayfield and Archbald. The watershed of the creek has an area of 6.73 square miles (17.4 km2). Part of the creek is impaired by abandoned mine drainage and/or resource extraction. The creek tends to be slightly acidic, but its iron, manganese, and aluminum concentrations do not need reduction to meet its total maximum daily load requirements. Its watershed is in the Appalachian Mountain section of the ridge and valley physiographic province. The headwaters of the creek are in the Moosic Mountains. The rock formations in the watershed mainly consist of interbedded sedimentary rock and sandstone. Lakes in the watershed of Aylesworth Creek include the Edgerton Reservoir and Aylesworth Creek Lake. The former is a former water supply reservoir, while the latter is used for flood control and recreation. The creek's upper reaches are mainly undisturbed, while the lower reaches are impacted by past mining operations and urban development. The significant majority of the watershed is forested. Pennsylvania State Game Lands are in the watershed's upper reaches and a tract of land maintained by the Lackawanna Valley Conservancy is at its mouth. Aylesworth Creek is designated as a Coldwater Fishery and a Migratory Fishery." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Lackawanna_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Lackawanna_County ;
wm:length 7.885786e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.8194e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Lackawanna_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Pennsylvania .
dbr:Babel_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Babel River" ;
wm:abstractText "Babel River is a stream in Bethel Census Area, Alaska, in the United States. Babel River was named for the Tower of Babel after much confusion regarding its name." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Bethel_Census_Area ;
wm:traverses dbr:Alaska .
dbr:Babocomari_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Babocomari River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Babocomari River is a major tributary of the upper San Pedro River in southeastern Arizona. The river begins in the Sonoita Basin near the community of Elgin, Arizona, and flows eastward for approximately 25 miles (40 km) before merging with the San Pedro, just south of the Fairbank Historic Townsite in the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area. The Babocomari drains an area of about 310 square miles (800 km2), including the northern Huachuca Mountains, the northwestern Canelo Hills, and the southern Mustang Mountains, and is one of three drainages of the Sonoita Basin, the other two being Sonoita Creek and Cienega Creek. Vegetation consists of riparian trees along the main channel and small marshy grasslands." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:merging_with_the_San_Pedro ;
wm:hasSource dbr:near_the_community_of_Elgin_Arizona ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.02336e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.16586e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:Arizona .
dbr:Baboosic_Brook a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Baboosic Brook" ;
wm:abstractText "Baboosic Brook is a 12.7-mile-long (20.4 km) stream located in southern New Hampshire in the United States. It is a tributary of the Souhegan River, which flows to the Merrimack River and ultimately to the Gulf of Maine. Baboosic Brook begins at the outlet of Baboosic Lake in the town of Amherst, New Hampshire. The brook takes a winding course (east- and southward flow predominating) through the towns of Amherst, Bedford, and Merrimack before ending at the Souhegan River near its outlet to the Merrimack River. Tributaries include Joe English Brook, Pulpit Brook, McQuade Brook, and Riddle Brook, all entering from the north." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:outlet_of_Baboosic_Lake ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 2.043867e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 2.8956e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Souhegan_River_Merrimack_River_Gulf_of_Maine ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Hampshire .
dbr:Bachman_Branch a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bachman Branch" ;
wm:abstractText "Bachman Branch (also Bachman Creek) is the name of a medium-sized tributary of the Trinity River with headwaters in northwest Dallas, Texas (USA). The tributary is 10 miles (16 km) in length and rises at , 0.5 miles (0.8 km) west of the Dallas North Tollway. It runs south and then west through Bachman Lake and ultimately into the Elm Fork of the Trinity River. The Branch is dammed with the New Frazier dam to provide water to Fishing Hole Lake. New Frasier Dam is on the Elm Fork Of Trinity River in Dallas County, Texas and is used for flood control purposes. Construction was completed in 1965. It is owned by the Dallas Water Utilities New Frasier Dam is a gravity dam. Its height is 16 feet with a length of 180 feet. Its capacity is 651 acre-feet (803,000 m3). Normal storage is 651 acre-feet (803,000 m3) Headwaters: 32°55′15.10″N 96°49′11.21″W / 32.9208611°N 96.8197806°W Mouth: 32°50′38.40″N 96°53′21.56″W / 32.8440000°N 96.8893222°W" ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Elm_Fork_of_the_Trinity_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:northwest_Dallas_Texas_USA ;
wm:inCountry dbr:USA ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Dallas_County ;
wm:length 1.609344e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.23e+02 ;
wm:otherNames "Bachman Creek" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Trinity_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Back_Branch_\(Deep_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back Branch (Deep River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back Branch is a 3.29 mi (5.29 km) long 2nd order tributary to the Deep River in Randolph, North Carolina." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Randolph ;
wm:length 7.306422e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.213104e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Back_Brook_\(New_Jersey\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back Brook (New Jersey)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back Brook is a tributary of Pike Run in Somerset County, New Jersey in the United States. It is located on the east side of Sourland Mountain." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Somerset_County ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.70688e+01 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Raritan_River_system ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_Jersey .
dbr:Back_Creek_\(Caraway_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back Creek (Caraway Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back Creek is a 9.78 mi (15.74 km) long 4th order tributary to Caraway Creek, in Randolph County, North Carolina." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Randolph_County ;
wm:length 1.573938e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.258824e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Back_Creek_\(Haw_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back Creek (Haw River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back Creek is a 8.77 mi (14.11 km) long 4th order tributary to the Haw River, in Alamance County, North Carolina." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Alamance_County ;
wm:length 1.411395e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.450848e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Back_Creek_\(Jackson_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back Creek (Jackson River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back Creek is a 41.3-mile-long (66.5 km) river in the United States state of Virginia. It is a tributary of the Jackson River, part of the James River watershed." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 6.646574e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 4.8768e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Jackson_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Back_Creek_\(Rocky_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back Creek (Rocky River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back Creek is a 11.59 mi (18.65 km) long 2nd order tributary to the Rocky River in Cabarrus County, North Carolina." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Cabarrus_County ;
wm:length 2.990161e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.578864e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem ;
wm:traverses dbr:North_Carolina .
dbr:Back_River_\(Kennebec_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Kennebec River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Back River is a 16-mile-long (26 km) waterway in coastal Maine, USA, in the combined estuary of the Sheepscot and the Kennebec rivers. The Back River runs from Wiscasset on the Sheepscot to Georgetown on the Kennebec, intersecting another channel, the Sasanoa River, at Hockomock Bay. Maine State Route 144 bridges the northern section of the Back River from Wiscasset to Westport Island. Maine Route 127 bridges the narrow southern part at Arrowsic, from Arrowsic Island to Georgetown Island. The site of the decommissioned Maine Yankee Nuclear Power Plant is on the northern section. Approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) south of where the river begins at the Sheepscot River, another waterway called Back River connects with the Sheepscot River." ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Wiscasset ;
wm:inCountry dbr:USA ;
wm:length 2.57495e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem ,
;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Back_River_\(Maryland\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Maryland)" ;
wm:abstractText "Back River is a tidal estuary in Baltimore County, Maryland, located about 2 miles (3 km) east of the city of Baltimore. The estuary extends from Essex, Maryland, southeast for about 8.8 miles (14.2 km) to the Chesapeake Bay. The watershed area is 39,075 acres (15,813 ha) and includes Essex Skypark Airport and the Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant. The river is shared between Essex, MD, Dundalk, MD, and Edgemere, MD" ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Baltimore_County ;
wm:length 1.44841e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maryland .
dbr:Back_River_\(Medomak_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Medomak River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Back River is a 1.7-mile-long (2.7 km) river in Friendship, Maine, which empties into the estuary of the Medomak River." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 2.735878e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Medomak_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Back_River_\(Meduncook_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Meduncook River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Back River is a short tributary of the Meduncook River in Friendship, Maine. From its source (44°01′02″N 69°18′16″W / 44.0171°N 69.30455°W), the river runs 2.7 miles (4.3 km) south to the estuary of the Meduncook." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:estuary_of_the_Meduncook ;
wm:hasSource ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 4.345229e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Meduncook_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Back_River_\(Powwow_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Powwow River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Back River is a 6.5-mile-long (10.5 km) river located in New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the United States. It is a tributary to the Powwow River, part of the Merrimack River watershed. Approximately 3.0 miles (4.8 km) of the river are in New Hampshire, with the remaining 3.5 miles (5.6 km) in Massachusetts. Prior to European settlement in the early 17th century, Native Americans of the Pennacook tribe lived in the area, and used both the Back River and parent Powwow River for transportation and fishing. The native population was essentially destroyed by the 1617-19 epidemic in the area. In the 1950s, the Clarks Pond Dam was built in Amesbury, Massachusetts, creating the pond of that name. Since the pond's creation, it has been degraded by residential building in the area, and was considered \"threatened\" in a 2013 report, by residential run-off and silt deposits. The Back River rises in Kensington, New Hampshire, and flows southeast, almost immediately entering the town of South Hampton. The river turns south and enters Massachusetts in Amesbury, joining the Powwow River at tidewater just downstream from the city's center at the falls of the Powwow." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Kensington_New_Hampshire ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 1.046074e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Powwow_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Massachusetts,
dbr:New_Hampshire .
dbr:Back_River_\(Saint_George_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Saint George River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Back River is a tributary of the Saint George River in Knox County, Maine. From its source in Far Meadow (44°02′53″N 69°16′08″W / 44.0481°N 69.2688°W) in Cushing, the river runs 10.7 miles (17.2 km) north, through South and North Ponds, to its confluence with the Saint George in Warren." ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Far_Meadow ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Knox_County ;
wm:length 1.721998e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 9.144e+00 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Saint_George_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Back_River_\(Sheepscot_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Back River (Sheepscot River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Back River is a 4.8-mile-long (7.7 km) tidal channel in the town of Boothbay, Maine, in the United States. It defines the east and south sides of Barters Island and connects with the Sheepscot River, which forms the west side of the island. The Cross River joins the north end of the Back River with the Sheepscot River to the west. Note that approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) north of where the river joins the Sheepscot River, another waterway of the same name connects with the Sheepscot River." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 7.724851e+03 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Sheepscot_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Bacon_Creek a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bacon Creek" ;
wm:abstractText "Bacon Creek is a glacial stream in Whatcom County, Washington. It originates in a glacier on the southwest face of Bacon Peak, flows into a small tarn, then flows over the Berdeen Falls. At the base of the waterfall, the creek turns southeast and joins the Skagit River near and discharges into the Skagit River near Marblemount. Bacon Creek was named for prospector Albert Bacon, who arrived in the area around 1879." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Skagit_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:southwest_face_of_Bacon_Peak ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Whatcom_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Skagit_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Washington .
dbr:Bad_Axe_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bad Axe River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Bad Axe River is a 4.2-mile-long (6.8 km) tributary of the Mississippi River in southwestern Wisconsin in the United States. \"Bad axe\" is a translation from the French, \"la mauvaise hache\", but the origin of the name is unknown. The river's mouth at the Mississippi was the site of the Battle of Bad Axe, an 1832 U.S. Army massacre of Sauk and Fox Indians at the end of the Black Hawk War." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Mississippi_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 6.759228e+03 ;
wm:otherNames "la mauvaise hache" ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Mississippi_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Wisconsin .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bad Luck Creek (Idaho County, Idaho)" ;
wm:abstractText "Bad Luck Creek is a stream in Idaho County, Idaho, in the United States. It is located within the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Idaho_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:Idaho .
dbr:Bad_Luck_Creek_\(Texas\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bad Luck Creek (Texas)" ;
wm:abstractText "Bad Luck Creek is a stream in Hardin County, Texas, in the United States. According to tradition, Bad Luck was so named after a local settler was shot in the crossfire of a skirmish." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Hardin_County ;
wm:traverses dbr:Texas .
dbr:Bad_River_\(Michigan\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bad River (Michigan)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Bad River is a 44.3-mile-long (71.3 km) river in Michigan. It rises in Newark Township near the city of Ithaca in Gratiot County and flows in a north-easterly direction into Saginaw County, and through the village of St. Charles, before emptying into the Shiawassee River within the bounds of the Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge. The river and its tributaries have a total combined length of 175 miles (282 km); most of it channelized. Land use within the surrounding watershed is 86.5 percent agricultural; as a result, the river system has been adversely impacted by sedimentation." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Newark_Township_near_the_city_of_Ithaca ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Gratiot_County_Saginaw_County ;
wm:length 7.129394e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Bad_River_and_its_tributaries ;
wm:traverses dbr:Michigan .
dbr:Bad_River_\(Wisconsin\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bad River (Wisconsin)" ;
wm:abstractText "The Bad River is a river flowing to Lake Superior in northern Wisconsin in the United States. It flows for 119.6 kilometres (74.3 mi) in Ashland County, draining an area of 1,061 square miles (2,750 km2) in portions of Ashland, Bayfield and Iron counties. The Bad River sloughs were designated a Ramsar Wetland of International Importance on February 2, 2012." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Ashland_County_Bayfield_and_Iron_counties ;
wm:length 1.195743e+05 ;
wm:mouthElevation 1.8288e+02 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Wisconsin .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Badger Creek (Houston County, Minnesota)" ;
wm:abstractText "Badger Creek is a stream in Houston County, in the U.S. state of Minnesota. It is a tributary of the South Fork Root River, which it meets east of Houston, Minnesota. Badger Creek was named for the badgers once common in the area." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:South_Fork_Root_River ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Houston_County ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:South_Fork_Root_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Minnesota .
dbr:Bagaduce_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bagaduce River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Bagaduce River is a tidal river in the Hancock County, Maine that empties into Penobscot Bay near the town of Castine. From the confluence of Black Brook and the outflow of Walker Pond (44°21′16″N 68°40′41″W / 44.3544°N 68.6781°W), the river runs about 14 miles (23 km) north, northwest, and southwest, forming the border between Brooksville on its left bank and Sedgwick, Penobscot, and Castine on its right. In 2014, residents of Penobscot raised concerns over the rapidly growing oyster farming on the Bagaduce River." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:Penobscot_Bay ;
wm:hasSource dbr:confluence_of_Black_Brook_and_the_outflow_of_Walker_Pond ;
wm:hasTributary dbr:Brooksville,
dbr:Sedgwick_Penobscot_and_Castine ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:inCounty dbr:Hancock_County ;
wm:length 2.253082e+04 ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Bagley_Brook_\(West_Branch_Delaware_River_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bagley Brook (West Branch Delaware River tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Bagley Brook flows into the West Branch Delaware River by De Lancey, New York." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:West_Branch_Delaware_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:New_York .
dbr:Bailey_Brook_\(West_Branch_French_Creek_tributary\) a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bailey Brook (West Branch French Creek tributary)" ;
wm:abstractText "Bailey Brook is a 4.39 mi (7.07 km) long tributary to West Branch French Creek that is classed as a 1st order stream on the EPA waters geoviewer site." ;
wm:hasMouth ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 7.06502e+03 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.950208e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem .
a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Bailey Creek (Hopewell, Virginia)" ;
wm:abstractText "Bailey Creek is an 8.6-mile-long (13.8 km) stream in the U.S. state of Virginia. It is a tributary of the James River, rising in Fort Lee east of Petersburg and flowing northeast past the city of Hopewell to reach the James River 2 miles (3 km) southeast of the mouth of the Appomattox River." ;
wm:hasMouth dbr:James_River ;
wm:hasSource dbr:Fort_Lee ;
wm:inCountry dbr:US ;
wm:length 1.384032e+04 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:James_River ;
wm:traverses dbr:Virginia .
dbr:Baker_Branch_Saint_John_River a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Baker Branch Saint John River" ;
wm:abstractText "The Baker Branch Saint John River is a 48.0-mile-long (77.2 km) river. This river is a tributary of the Saint John River (Bay of Fundy), flowing in the Maine North Woods, in Maine, in the Northeastern United States." ;
wm:inCountry dbr:United_States ;
wm:length 7.724851e+04 ;
wm:mouthElevation 3.3528e+02 ;
wm:partOfSystem dbr:Saint_John_River_Bay_of_Fundy ;
wm:traverses dbr:Maine .
dbr:Baker_Mill_Branch a wm:River ;
rdfs:label "Baker Mill Branch" ;
wm:abstractText "Baker Mill Branch is a 3.53 mi (5.68 km) long 2nd order tributary to Deep Creek in Sussex County, Delaware. This is the only stream of this name in the United States." ;
wm:hasMouth