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Inland and intracoastal waterways directly serve 38 states throughout the nation's heartland as well as the states on the Atlantic seaboard, the Gulf Coast and the Pacific Northwest. The shippers and consumers in these states depend on the inland waterways to move about 630 million tons of cargo valued at over $73 billion annually.
The agency anticipates stocking 1,848,000 fingerlings and 12,875,000 fry this year from the Linesville State Fish Hatchery next to the Pymatuning Reservoir in northwestern Pennsylvania and ...
USGS Geographic Names Information System ; USGS Hydrologic Unit Map - State of Pennsylvania (1974) Shaw, Lewis C. (June 1984). Pennsylvania Gazetteer of Streams Part II (Water Resources Bulletin No. 16). Prepared in Cooperation with the United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey (1st ed.).
Thus the Little Juniata was (and still is) listed as a commercially "navigable" river. The Little Juniata River is a good spot for fly fishing; it holds a Class A population of wild brown trout and requires no stocking. Accident on the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, on the river near Birmingham, Huntingdon County; Harper's Weekly, January 14, 1864
A 1791 map of the roads and inland navigation of Pennsylvania, and part of the adjacent states based upon the river surveys in 1790 and 1791 A 1792 map of a proposed route for the summit canal based upon Brindley's survey of 1791 An 1816 map of Lebanon County, Pennsylvania showing 1794 Schuylkill and Susquehanna Navigation company summit crossing construction with its highlighted in red An ...
PA 949, Park Road, McManigle Road, Caldwell Corners Road, Bottom Road, Jefferson County 4001, PA 949, Howe Road, Old State Road, Hudson Drive, Fisher-Strattonville Road, Millcreek Drive Mill Creek is a tributary of the Clarion River in Clarion and Jefferson counties, Pennsylvania in the United States .
The river is partly navigable for commercial purposes through a series of locks. In the early 1900s the river was navigable as far as Pikeville. Variant names, according to the USGS, include Louisa River, Louisa Fork, Lavisa Fork, and West Fork, in addition to Levisa Fork River and Levisa Fork of the Big Sandy River.
French Creek begins near French Creek, New York, and flows about 117 miles (188 km) to the Allegheny River at Franklin, Pennsylvania. The creek's drainage basin covers 1,270 square miles (3,300 km 2). [7] The watershed includes parts of Erie, Crawford, Venango, and Mercer counties in Pennsylvania as well as Chautauqua County in New York. [1]