Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Caribou is an unincorporated community in Caribou Township, Kittson County, Minnesota, United States. The community is located northeast of Lancaster, along Kittson County Road 4, near its junction with Kittson County Road 53.
The Caribou River is a 15.0-mile-long (24.1 km) [1] river in northern Minnesota, the United States.It rises in a swamp about .6 miles (1 km) south of Morris Lake and two miles (3.2 km) east of Echo Lake, near the Lake/Cook County line, at an altitude about 1620 feet (494 m) above sea level.
Caribou Township is a township in Kittson County, Minnesota, United States. Caribou Township was organized in 1908, and named for the migratory woodland caribou in the area. [ 3 ] The population was 48 at the 2000 census.
This is a list of lakes of Minnesota. Although promoted as the "Land of 10,000 Lakes", Minnesota has 11,842 lakes of 10 acres (4.05 ha) or more. [1] The 1968 state survey found 15,291 lake basins, of which 3,257 were dry. [2] If all basins over 2.5 acres were counted, Minnesota would have 21,871 lakes. [3]
Boy River (Leech Lake) Buffalo Creek (Crow River tributary) Burntside River; Caribou River (Minnesota) Cascade River (Minnesota) Cat River (Minnesota) Center Creek (Minnesota) Chub River; Clearwater River (Mississippi River tributary) Clearwater River (Red Lake River tributary) Cloquet River; Cobb River (Minnesota) Crocodile River (Minnesota)
Caribou River , 15.0 mi-long (24. ... (309 km) Map of the Saint Louis ... The Mississippi River is the longest river flowing through Minnesota. It originates in Lake ...
Kittson County is in Minnesota's northwest corner, on the borders of North Dakota and Canada. The Red River flows north along the county's western border. The South Fork of Two Rivers flows east through the central part of the county on its way to discharge into the Red; it meets the Middle Fork at Hallock, and the combined flow meets the North ...
[3] Minnesota's state park system is the second oldest in the United States, after New York's. [4]: 2 Minnesota's state parks are spread across the state in such a way that there is a state park within 50 miles (80 km) of every Minnesotan. [5] The most recent park created is Lake Vermilion State Park, created in 2010.