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"Wahpper" is a 40-foot long fiberglass sculpture of a catfish beside the Red River of the North in Wahpeton, North Dakota, United States. 46°17′20″N 96°35′49″W / 46.28889°N 96.59694°W / 46.28889; -96
The Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site is located in central North Dakota, at the confluence of the Knife River with the Missouri River. The village is located ½ mile north of present-day Stanton, North Dakota, 1 hour north west of Bismarck, and 1 ½ hours south west of Minot, North Dakota. The Knife River is a tributary to the ...
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The Knife River, highlighted in a map of the watershed of the Missouri River. The Knife River is a tributary of the Missouri River, approximately 120 mi (193 km) long, in North Dakota in the United States. [1] Knife is an English translation of the Native American name. [2] It rises in west central North Dakota, in the Killdeer Mountains in ...
In 1958, Governor John Davis declared Drayton the baseball capital of North Dakota. Drayton won the state High School baseball championship every year from 1958 to 1963. In 1958 and 1962, Drayton also won the American Legion class A championship.
Flowing 581 miles (~929 km) from its headwaters located 15 miles north of McClusky in Sheridan County until it converges with the Red River at Fargo, the Sheyenne River is the longest river located within North Dakota. The river valley from Baldhill Dam at Lake Ashtabula and south to Lisbon can be as deep as 200 feet and a mile wide.
An overturned tractor trailer carrying live catfish caused a big spill on Interstate 95, North Carolina officials say. The truck crashed heading north on I-95 around 5 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, a ...
The Biesterfeldt Site, in a wrong spelling named for its 1930s landowner Mr. Louis Biesterfeld, [4]: vii is located southeast of Lisbon, on a terrace overlooking a former channel of the Sheyenne River. The main area of the site is a rough oval bounded to the northwest by 30 feet (9.1 meters) step bank down to the former riverbed and on the ...