Little Missouri River (North Dakota)

Little Missouri River
Little Missouri watershed
Little Missouri River (North Dakota) is located in North Dakota
Little Missouri River (North Dakota)
Location of the mouth of the Little Missouri River in North Dakota
Location
CountryUnited States
StateWyoming, Montana, South Dakota, North Dakota
Physical characteristics
SourceFlatiron Butte
 • locationnear Oshoto, Crook County, Wyoming
 • coordinates44°32′25″N 104°59′57″W / 44.54028°N 104.99917°W / 44.54028; -104.99917[1]
 • elevation4,501 ft (1,372 m)[2]
MouthMissouri River[3]
 • location
Lake Sakakawea, near Killdeer, Dunn County, North Dakota
 • coordinates
47°36′38″N 102°52′24″W / 47.61056°N 102.87333°W / 47.61056; -102.87333[1]
 • elevation
1,860 ft (570 m)[1]
Length560 mi (900 km)[4]
Basin size8,310 sq mi (21,500 km2)[5]
Discharge 
 • location17.5 miles (28.2 km) south of Watford City, about 25 miles (40 km) from the mouth[6]
 • average534 cu ft/s (15.1 m3/s)[6]
 • minimum0 cu ft/s (0 m3/s)
 • maximum110,000 cu ft/s (3,100 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • left
  • Slick Creek
  • Ebert Creek
  • Tie Creek
  • Wagon Creek
 • right
  • Fortyeight Mile Creek
  • Oley Creek
The river and the Theodore Roosevelt National Park appear with Roosevelt on the reverse of the 2016 America the Beautiful quarter.

The Little Missouri River is a tributary of the Missouri River, 560 miles (900 km) long, in the northern Great Plains of the United States.[4] Rising in northeastern Wyoming, in western Crook County about 15 miles (24 km) west of Devils Tower,[7] it flows northeastward, across a corner of southeastern Montana, and into South Dakota. In South Dakota, it flows northward through the Badlands into North Dakota, crossing the Little Missouri National Grassland and all three units of Theodore Roosevelt National Park. In the north unit of the park, it turns eastward and flows into the Missouri in Dunn County at Lake Sakakawea, where it forms an arm of the reservoir 30 miles (48 km) long called Little Missouri Bay and joins the main channel of the Missouri about 25 miles (40 km) northeast of Killdeer.[8]

The highly seasonal runoff from badlands and other treeless landscapes along the Little Missouri carries heavy loads of eroded sediment downstream.[9] The sedimentary layers, which extend from the headwaters in Wyoming all the way to the mouth in North Dakota, vary in age, but most of the beds along the river belong to the Bullion Creek and Sentinel Butte formations, both deposited during the Paleocene (about 66 to 56 million years ago).[10] The deposits include siltstone, claystone, sandstone, and lignite coal laid down in a coastal plain during the Laramide orogeny.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Little Missouri River". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. February 13, 1980. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  2. ^ Source elevation derived from Google Earth search using GNIS source coordinates.
  3. ^ Federal Writers' Project (1940). South Dakota place-names, v.3. University of South Dakota. p. 4. Archived from the original on July 20, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Personius, Robert Giles; Eddy, Samuel (February 18, 1955). "Fishes of the Little Missouri River". Copeia. 1955 (1). American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists: 41. doi:10.2307/1439450. JSTOR 1439450.
  5. ^ "USGS 06337000 Little Missouri River near Watford City, ND". November 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2011. This is only a close approximation of the entire basin. It does not include a small fraction of the basin below the river gauge, located about 25 mi (40 km) upstream of the river mouth.
  6. ^ a b "USGS 06337000 Little Missouri River near Watford City, ND". November 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2011. This is the average discharge for the years 1990–2010, derived by adding the discharge for each of these years and dividing by 21.
  7. ^ Wyoming Atlas & Gazetteer (Map) (6th ed.). DeLorme. 2009. § 19. ISBN 0-89933-338-9.
  8. ^ The Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally & Company. 2008. § 61, 77. ISBN 978-0-528-93961-7.
  9. ^ "Little Missouri River Description". United States Geological Survey. December 31, 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  10. ^ a b Bluemle, John P. "North Dakota Notes #12: North Dakota's Badlands". North Dakota Geological Survey. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2011.