River in Minnesota, United States
The Little Minnesota River is a 71.4-mile-long (114.9 km)[ 1] headwaters tributary of the Minnesota River in northeastern South Dakota and west-central Minnesota in the United States .[ 2] Via the Minnesota River, it is part of the Mississippi River watershed .[ 3]
Course
The Little Minnesota rises in Marshall County, South Dakota from the Coteau des Prairies near the town of Veblen and flows generally southeastward through Roberts County , where it collects two small tributaries, Standfast Creek and the Jorgenson River . Near the Minnesota state line, it passes within a mile of Lake Traverse , part of the Hudson Bay watershed , from which it is separated by a low continental divide . The river enters Minnesota at the town of Browns Valley and shortly enters Big Stone Lake , which is drained by the Minnesota River. The region between Lake Traverse and Big Stone Lake is known as the Traverse Gap ; it was formed by Glacial River Warren which drained Lake Agassiz (the lakebed of which is now the Red River Valley ) toward the end of the last of the ice ages .
At Peever, SD , the river measures approximately 63 cubic feet per second.[ 4]
See also
References
Waters, Thomas F. (1977). The Streams and Rivers of Minnesota . Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-0960-8 .