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The branches merge to form the main Delaware River at Hancock, New York. Flowing south, the river remains relatively undeveloped, with 152 miles (245 km) protected as the Upper, Middle, and Lower Delaware National Scenic Rivers. [4] At Trenton, New Jersey, the Delaware becomes tidal, navigable, and significantly more industrial.
The Delaware River looking north above Walpack Bend near Walpack, New Jersey, where the river leaves the historic Minisink region, a buried valley eroded from the Marcellus Formation The watershed of the Delaware River drains an area of 14,119 square miles (36,570 km 2 ) and encompasses 42 counties and 838 municipalities in five U.S. states ...
Fort DuPont State Park, Delaware and Fort Mott, New Jersey 39°35′6.7″N 75°33′54.52″W / 39.585194°N 75.5651444°W / 39.585194; -75.5651444 ( Forts Ferry Zoom out if map is blank.
Assunpink Creek is a 22.9-mile-long (36.9 km) [1] tributary of the Delaware River in western New Jersey in the United States. [2] The name Assunpink is from the Lenape Ahsën'pink , meaning "stony, watery place".
Among the major rivers in New Jersey are the Manasquan, Maurice, Mullica, Passaic, Rahway, Raritan, Musconetcong, Hudson and Delaware rivers. Throughout history, the Delaware and Raritan rivers have played a crucial role in transporting goods and people from the Atlantic Ocean into the inland areas, and they were once connected by the Delaware ...
Duck Island is a peninsula and former island in the wetlands at the confluence of the Delaware River and Crosswicks Creek in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States. [1] It is mostly located within Hamilton Township, but its northwest edge crosses the Trenton city limits.
This is a route-map template for the Delaware River, a waterway in the United States.. For a key to symbols, see {{waterways legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
The Capture of the Hessians at Trenton, December 26, 1776, a painting by John Trumbull The Old Barracks in Trenton. The earliest known inhabitants of the area that is today Trenton were the Lenape Native Americans, [38] specifically the Axion band who were the largest tribe on the Delaware River in the mid-17th century.