Ohio River: Difference between revisions
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Before engineers built locks, and dredged shallow reaches, the river's average speed was five miles per hour.<ref name=usaceOhio1983-01/> | Before engineers built locks, and dredged shallow reaches, the river's average speed was five miles per hour.<ref name=usaceOhio1983-01/> | ||
The [[Falls of the Ohio]], at present day [[Louisville, Kentucky]], was the only navigational obstacle on the Ohio, until it was circumvented by a canal. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 07:22, 4 March 2022
The Ohio River is the largest tributary of the Mississippi River, by volume. It flows for 981 miles from Pittsburgh to where the river empties into the Mississippi at Cairo, Illinois.
The Ohio River drains a basin of 204,000 square miles.[1] The Allegheny and Monongahela rivers meet at what is now Pittsburgh, to form the Ohio.[2] Other tributaries include the Green, Cumberland, Tennessee, Beaver, Muskingum, Scioto, Miami, and Wabash rivers.
Before engineers built locks, and dredged shallow reaches, the river's average speed was five miles per hour.[1]
The Falls of the Ohio, at present day Louisville, Kentucky, was the only navigational obstacle on the Ohio, until it was circumvented by a canal.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Michael C. Robinson (January 1983). History of Navigation in the Ohio River Basin. US Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved on 2021-03-15.