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The Little Lost River's drainage basin is approximately 971 square miles (2,515 km 2) in area [2] Its mean annual discharge, as measured by USGS gage 13118700 (Little Lost River below Wet Creek, near Howe, Idaho), is 65 cubic feet per second (1.8 m 3 /s), with a maximum daily recorded flow of 486 cu ft/s (14 m 3 /s), and a minimum of 3 cu ft/s ...
The river terminates at the Big Lost River Sinks, a patch of marshland where its water drains into the ground. Even though its surface flow is lost (hence its name) a short distance out of the mountains, the river is hydrologically connected to the Snake River , the largest river of Idaho by discharge, via the Snake River Aquifer and various ...
Bear River (Great Salt Lake) – Bear River in SE Idaho, SW Wyoming, and NE Utah corner; Beaver dam; Beaver Creek; ... USGS Hydrologic Unit Map - State of Idaho (1974)
The river disappears into a series of sink holes of the type that are abundant in the karstland of southern Indiana. [5] The Lost River of New Hampshire is a 4-mile-long (6 km) stream in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. It is part of the Pemigewasset River watershed.
Camas Creek (Clark and Jefferson counties, Idaho) Canyon Creek (Teton River tributary) Cassia Creek; Chief Eagle Eye Creek (Payette River tributary) Clark Fork River; Clearwater River (Idaho) Clover Creek (Bruneau River tributary) Coeur d'Alene River; Collins Creek (Idaho) Continental Creek; Cow Creek (Jordan Creek tributary) Cub River
By far, the most important river in Idaho is the Snake River, a major tributary of the Columbia River. The Snake River flows out from Yellowstone in northwestern Wyoming through the Snake River Plain in southern Idaho before turning north, leaving the state at Lewiston before joining the Columbia in Kennewick.
It begins in Wyoming and flows through Idaho for 769 miles (1,238 km), and then through Oregon and Washington. Some of the other streams also cross borders between Idaho and Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, or Wyoming, but the majority flow entirely within Idaho, the longest of which is the Salmon River at 425 miles (684 km).
From its source in Custer County, at the confluence of the West Fork and East Fork headwaters, the Pahsimeroi River flows generally northwest, through the Pahsimeroi Valley, between the Lemhi Range to the east, and the Lost River Range and to the west. The Pahsimeroi River joins the Salmon River near Ellis, Idaho, upriver from Salmon, Idaho.