6 messages.-------------------Johnnie ----------------------------------------------- >Date: Thu, 28 May 1998 09:32:14 -0400 >From: Jim Pace <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: Re: trivia question My guess would be the Pend Oreille river in Washington State, in Connie's back yard. Number 2 in size is probably the Kootenai, next door in Idaho. These are both big rivers, with high water runs over 100,000 cfs in some years. Jim Pace At 03:37 PM 5/27/98 EDT, you wrote: >----------------------------Original message---------------------------- > >Folks-- > > What is the largest U.S. river to flow north? Apparently, it's >neither the Red River (my guess), nor the Yukon River in Alaska. > > -- Connie Manson > --------------------------------------------------------------------- >From: Mark Thomas <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: Re: trivia question >Date: Thu, 28 May 1998 14:15:32 -0400 (Eastern Daylight Time) Sorry for drowning a dead horse, but this topic just came up here this week and is fresh in my mind. Besides the Willamette and the Snake, others that flow north (don't know if they qualify for being long or wide or fast or full): The San Joaquin (I guess it's flow is heavily altered due to irrigation). The New River, which starts in western NC and flows into the Kanawha River upstream from Charleston, WV. I've several times heard statements that the New River is the *only* north-flowing river in the eastern US, or even in the whole US, and this came up again this week. This bogus factoid is usually presented as if there's something gravity-defying about this. It's sort of an urban (or, rural) legend. Actually, the Kanawha, too, flows pretty much N. into the Ohio, and it's big enough to be navigable. Volumetrically, I would have thought it would be the Niagara and the St. Lawrence (flows NE), if you're willing to count shared rivers. Doesn't the St. Johns move pretty slowly? Does it carry as much water as the St. Lawrence?? These rivers are obviously not all that rare, even in a country that has a bunch of land along it's northern border. --Mark ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Mark Thomas / Public Documents & Maps / Perkins Library Duke University / Durham, NC 27708-0177 [log in to unmask] / voice: 919-660-5853 / FAX: 919-684-2855 The train ... traditional, yet environmentally sound. --Lisa Simpson --------------------------------------------------------------------- >From: [log in to unmask] >Date: Thu, 28 May 1998 12:42:47 MDT >Subject: Re: trivia question Could it be the St. Johns River in Florida? This river flows north, parallel to the Atlantic coast, for about 280 miles before turning east, to the Atlantic, at Jacksonville. Trudy Sauter Sr. Catalog Librarian Denver Public Library Denver, Colorado [log in to unmask] ------------------------------------------------------------------- >Date: Fri, 29 May 1998 07:03:59 -0500 >From: "James R. Carter" <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: Re: trivia question When I get a question of this type I want to know who wants the answer, and why? But, without that knowledge of the source of the question, let me suggest that the Tennessee River might be a good answer. Supposedly, it has the sixth highest flow of the rivers in the U.S. It heads in western Virginia and North Carolina. It becomes the Tennessee in Knoxville with the junction of the French Broad and Holston. It then flows SW until it ends up in Alabama. It has been said that it then realizes its mistake and turns North to join the Ohio near Paducah. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. James R. Carter, Professor, Geography/Geology Department Illinois State University, Normal, IL 61790-4400 USA Director, Laboratory for Integrated Learning and Technology at Illinois State University, and Chair, Map Use Commission of the International Cartographic Assocation tel: (309) 438-2833 fax: (309) 438-5310 [log in to unmask] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------- >Date: Fri, 29 May 1998 10:02:38 -0500 >From: Philip Rufe <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: Re: trivia question Some other north-flowing (at least for a portion of their course) rivers are the Shenandoah River in Virginia and the Tennessee River where it flows through Tennessee and Kentucky before emptying into the Ohio River. ********************************************** Philip P. Rufe, Cartographer USGS - MCMC Mail Stop 706 1400 Independence Rd Rolla Missouri 65401 (573) 308 - 3540 / (573) 308 - 3652 fax [log in to unmask] *********************************************** ------------------------------------------------------------------- >Date: Thu, 28 May 1998 19:22:47 -0700 >From: "Virginia R. Hetrick" <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: North-flowing rivers Well, since I once lived in Gainesville, I'll propose the St. Johns River (all true Gators know WHY it flows north, Johnny! ;-) vh-- \ / Virginia R. Hetrick, here in sunny SoCal 0 Bellnet: 310.206.7588 Oo Email: [log in to unmask] http://www.ioa.ucla.edu/~hetrick Site of the month: http://www.anbg.gov.au/anbg/index.html