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The former course of the Wabash River, running by the former site of the original Fort Recovery; the reproduction can be seen in the background, but it is not the original fort Forks of the Wabash at Huntington, Indiana U.S. Route 31 Business crossing of the Wabash River in Peru, Indiana. The Wabash River rises 4 miles south of Fort Recovery ...
The Watersheds of Indiana consist of six distinct Indiana watershed regions that drain into five major bodies of water. In the above map, The largest area, shaded in green, drains into the Wabash River .
Sugar Creek (Driftwood River tributary) Sugar Creek (Wabash River tributary), also called Sugar Creek, Rock River; Tippecanoe River; Trail Creek; Vermilion River; Vernon Fork Muscatatuck River; Wabash River; White Lick Creek; White River; Whitewater River; Wildcat Creek; Yellow River; Youngs Creek (Johnson County, Indiana) Youngs Creek (Orange ...
The Wabash River, shown within its drainage basin. The Wabash Valley is a region located in sections of both Illinois and Indiana.It is named for the Wabash River and, as the name is typically used, spans the middle to the middle-lower portion of the river's valley and is centered at Terre Haute, Indiana.
The Eel River is a 94-mile-long (151 km) [4] tributary of the Wabash River in northern Indiana in the United States. Via the Wabash and Ohio rivers, its waters flow to the Mississippi River and ultimately the Gulf of Mexico .
The Tippecanoe River (/ ˌ t ɪ p ə k ə ˈ n uː / TIP-ə-kə-NOO) is a gentle, 182-mile-long (293 km) [1] river in the Central Corn Belt Plains ecoregion in northern Indiana.It flows from Crooked Lake in Noble County to the Wabash River near what is now Battle Ground, about 12 miles (19 km) northeast of Lafayette.
Wildcat Creek is a tributary of the Wabash River in north-central Indiana. The stream is 84 miles (135 km) long [1] and drains an area of 804.2 square miles (2,083 km 2). [2] Wildcat Creek consists of three main forks-North, South, and Middle.
Fort Wayne is located at an old portage between the Maumee River and the Wabash River. Here, the canal crossed 5 miles to the Little Wabash River and headed downstream through Indiana. Since this was the highest point on the canal (i.e., the summit), Fort Wayne became known as the "Summit City."