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The Mississippi River is the primary river, and second-longest river, of the largest drainage basin in the United States. From its traditional source of Lake Itasca in northern Minnesota, it flows generally south for 2,340 miles (3,766 km) to the Mississippi River Delta in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Lower Mississippi River
The Lower Mississippi River is the portion of the...
- Hudson Bay
Hudson Bay, sometimes called Hudson's Bay (usually...
- Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone
In the Lower Mississippi one-third of the valley's forests...
- Mississippi River System
The Mississippi River System, also referred to as the...
- Atchafalaya River
The Atchafalaya River (/ ə ˌ tʃ æ f. ə ˈ l aɪ. ə / French:...
- Mississippi Embayment
The Mississippi embayment stretches from central Louisiana...
- Mississippi River (Ontario)
The Mississippi River at Galetta. The Mississippi River is a...
- Coon Rapids Dam
Geography. According to the United States Census Bureau, the...
- Mississippi (Disambiguation)
Places. Mississippi River, a river in central United States;...
- Lower Mississippi River
May 14, 2024 · Mississippi River, the longest river of North America, draining with its major tributaries an area of approximately 1.2 million square miles (3.1 million square km), or about one-eighth of the entire continent. The Mississippi River lies entirely within the United States.
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The Kankakee rises in northwestern Indiana, approximately five miles (8.0 km) southwest of South Bend, Indiana. It flows in a straight channelized course, generally southwestward through rural northwestern Indiana, collecting the Yellow River from the south in Starke County, and passing the communities of South Center and English Lake.
The largely flat and flood-prone bottomlands of Indiana, where the Wabash, White, and Ohio Rivers converge, hosts numerous plant and animal species normally found in the Lower Mississippi and Gulf Coast region of the United States.
Sep 23, 2016 · The animated map above, made by NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio, highlights the river’s huge watershed and every river in it, conveying a magnitude that can be hard to fathom.
- Betsy Mason
- 21 sec
Apr 15, 2021 · The Mississippi River is the second longest river in North America measuring a total length of 2320 miles from its traditional source at Lake Itasca. It flows south at a speed of 1.2 miles per hour to the Mississippi River Delta in the Gulf of Mexico and forms the second largest drainage system in North America after the Hudson Bay.
The Mississippi River, derived from the Ojibwa (Chippewa Indian) language meaning “great river” or literally, “river of the falls,” is the second-longest river in North America, meandering from Lake Itasca in northern Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico in Louisiana, a journey of over 2,300 miles.