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The Kiamichi River is a river in southeastern Oklahoma, United States of America. A tributary of the Red River of the South, its headwaters rise on Pine Mountain in the Ouachita Mountains near the Arkansas border. From its source in Polk County, Arkansas, it flows approximately 177 miles (285 km) [3] to its confluence with the Red River at Hugo ...
River cubic feet per second flow Location of monitoring station Arkansas River: 39,260: Near Arkansas state line Red River: 12,910: Near Arkansas state line Neosho (Grand) River: 8,890: Near Chouteau: Canadian River: 6,523: Near Whitefield Verdigris River: 5,744: Below junction with Bird Creek Little River (Red River tributary) 3,275: Near ...
View of Fourche Maline. Fourche Maline (pronounced foosh-ma-lean) (Bad Fork, French) is a 70.0-mile-long (112.7 km) [1] tributary of the Poteau River in Oklahoma. [a] The headwaters of Fourche Maline are in the Sans Bois Mountains in northwest Latimer County.
The Caney River (Lenape: Kènii Sipu [4]) is a 180-mile-long (290 km) [1] river in southern Kansas and northeastern Oklahoma. The river is a tributary of the Verdigris River, and is usually a flatwater stream. The Caney forms just north of the town of Grenola in Elk County, Kansas, then moves south into Oklahoma near Elgin, Kansas.
Salt Fork Arkansas River; Salt Fork Red River; Sans Bois Creek; Seneca Creek (New Mexico/Oklahoma) Skeleton Creek (Oklahoma) South Carrizo Creek; Spavinaw Creek; Spring Creek (Beaver River Tributary) Spring Creek (Neosho River Tributary) Spring River (Missouri) Sugar Creek (Caddo County, Oklahoma) Sweetwater Creek (Gray County, Texas)
Roman Nose State Park is a state park located in Blaine County, 7 miles (11 km) north of Watonga, Oklahoma. [3] Roman Nose State Park is one of the original seven Oklahoma state parks. [3] Sitting in a small canyon, recreation activities at this state park include a golf course, swimming pools, hiking trails, two lakes (Lake Watonga and Lake ...
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On John C. Fremont's route map of 1845, the river's name is listed as "Goo-al-pah or Canadian River" from the Comanche and Kiowa name for the river (Kiowa gúlvàu, [ɡúᵈl.pʼɔː] 'red river'). In 1929, Muriel H. Wright wrote that the Canadian River was named about 1820 by French traders who noted another group of traders from Canada ...