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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 ...
Its mean annual discharge, as measured at river mile 9.2 (Henrys Fork near Rexburg) by the United States Geological Survey (USGS), [6] is 2,096 cubic feet per second (59.4 m 3 /s), with a maximum daily recorded flow of 79,000 cubic feet per second (2,240 m 3 /s), and a minimum of 183 cubic feet per second (5.18 m 3 /s). [5]
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).
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 North Fork Clearwater River is a major tributary of the Clearwater River in the U.S. state of Idaho. [1] From its headwaters in the Bitterroot Mountains of eastern Idaho, it flows 135 miles (217 km) [2] westward and is dammed by the Dworshak Dam just above its mouth in north-central Idaho.
The river is formed by the confluence of the American River and Red River in the Nez Perce National Forest at an elevation of 3,901 ft (1,189 m). The roughly 20-mile (32 km) American River rises at 5,200 ft (1,600 m) and flows generally south to the confluence, while the northwest flowing Red River, rising at 6,100 ft (1,900 m), is about 25 mi (40 km) long.
From the end of Hells Canyon at Asotin, Washington, it flows north to Lewiston, Idaho, where it is joined from the right by the Clearwater River, its largest tributary by volume. The Snake then turns sharply west to enter Washington. [1] The final stretch of the Snake River flows through steep-sided valleys in the Palouse Hills of southeast ...
The North Fork Payette River (/ p eɪ ˈ ɛ t /) is a river in the western United States in western Idaho.It flows about 113 miles (182 km) southwards from the Salmon River Mountains to near Banks, where it empties into the Payette River, a tributary of the Snake River.