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The Lost River is so-named because the brook draining the southern part of Kinsman Notch disappears below the surface in a narrow, steep-walled glacial gorge. The gorge is partially filled with immense blocks of granite, through the spaces of which the brook cascades along its subterranean course until it eventually emerges and joins the Pemigewasset River, which flows southward from Franconia ...
The Lost River begins on the eastern slopes of Mount Moosilauke below the peak of Mount Jim and above Kinsman Notch, one of the major passes through the White Mountains. As it flows through the notch, it passes through Lost River Gorge , an area where enormous boulders falling off the flanking walls of the notch at the close of the last Ice Age ...
The Lost River Reservation, a wild gorge filled with enormous boulders, is found in the floor of the notch to the southeast of the height of land. [5] New Hampshire Route 112 traverses the notch on its route from North Woodstock to Woodsville, New Hampshire. [6]
Orange County: Indiana's Lost River bubbles up at Orangeville Rise Visiting Orangeville Rise is another way to get a view into the Lost River as it surfaces from the caves and passages underground.
Lost River State Forest, Minnesota Lost River Athletic Conference , a 1970s high school conference in Indiana Lost River Jr./Sr. High School , serving Merrill, Oregon
The Lost River Range is a high mountain range of the Rocky Mountains, located in Central Idaho, in the Northwestern United States. [ 1 ] It runs southeast for approximately 75 miles (121 km) from the Salmon River near the community of Challis to the Snake River Valley near Arco .
Lost River State Park is a state park located in Hardy County, West Virginia near the community of Mathias. The park encompasses 3,712 acres (15.02 km 2) managed by the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources. Despite the name of the park, it does not abut the Lost River; it lies about 2.3 miles (3.7 km) west of the river.
“This is the first study to provide the first map of the long-lost ancient branch of the Nile River.” Ghoneim and her colleagues refer to this extinct branch of the Nile river as Ahramat ...