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List of rivers in Arizona , sorted by name. By drainage basin. This list is arranged by drainage basin, with respective tributaries indented under each larger stream ...
Arizona Weekly Citizen – Tucson 1880s – 1890s [33] See also: Arizona Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Daily Citizen. Arizona Weekly Enterprise – Florence 1880s – 1890s [34] Arizona Weekly Journal-Miner – Prescott [35] See also: Arizona Miner, Arizona Weekly Miner. Arizona Weekly Miner – Prescott [36] See also: Arizona Miner, Arizona ...
The Rio de Flag, which has historically been known as the River de Flag [2] and San Francisco river, [3] is a river in Arizona that runs through Flagstaff, originating from the San Francisco Peaks before draining into the Little Colorado River. The river's age is unknown, though its first channels were around over one million years ago. [4]
We expected Arizona to absorb even deeper water cuts in 2023. But we can't conserve enough by ourselves to stabilize the Colorado River.
The precursor to the Arizona Daily Star was The Bulletin, the first daily newspaper published in Tucson. It was started March 1, 1877 by L.C. Hughes and Charles Tully, later publishers of The Star. The Bulletin was succeeded by The Arizona Tri-Weekly Star, under the same ownership March 29, 1877. [2]
The Santa Cruz River east of Nogales just after re-entering the United States from Mexico. The Santa Cruz has its headwaters in the high intermontane grasslands of the San Rafael Valley to the southeast of Patagonia, Arizona, between the Canelo Hills to the east and the Patagonia Mountains to the west, just north of the international border.
The Salt River (Spanish: Río Salado, O'odham [Pima]: Onk Akimel, Yavapai: Hakanyacha or Hakathi:, Maricopa language: Va Shly'ay [5]) is a river in Gila and Maricopa counties in Arizona, United States, that is the largest tributary of the Gila River. [2]
Santa Cruz Valley National Heritage Area is a federally designated National Heritage Area in south Arizona. The national heritage area covers 3,300 square miles of the watershed of the Santa Cruz River to protect and honor the areas natural environment, culture, and historic sites. [1] It includes land in both Pima County and Santa Cruz County. [2]