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Ross Fork is a tributary stream of the Snake River in Bannock and Bingham counties in the U.S. state of Idaho. [1] It flows into Clear Creek, which joins the Snake River at the American Falls Reservoir. The watershed of the creek drains almost entirely within the Fort Hall Indian Reservation, located in southeastern, Idaho. Although once a ...
By 1868, exhausted after years of fighting, Chief Pocatello and many others surrendered and relocated to the Fort Hall Indian Reservation on the Snake River in southeast Idaho. [121]: 226 A train crosses the Snake River at American Falls, c. 1915. Railroads first reached the Snake River Plain in the 1880s.
Caldron Linn, or Cauldron Linn, also known as Star Falls, is a waterfall on the Snake River in Jerome County and Twin Falls County of southern Idaho. [1] [2] Caldron Linn was a key site of the Overland Party of the Pacific Fur Company, an expedition to the Pacific Ocean led by Wilson Price Hunt. The expedition attempted to canoe down the Snake ...
The Bruneau River is a 153-mile-long (246 km) [3] [4] tributary of the Snake River in the western United States, located in Idaho and Nevada. It runs through a narrow canyon cut into ancient lava flows in southwestern Idaho. The Bruneau Canyon, which is up to 1,200 feet (370 m) deep and forty miles (65 km) long, features rapids and hot springs ...
Rock Creek (Oneida and Power counties, Idaho) - Deep Creek tributary; Rock Creek (Power and Oneida counties, Idaho) - Snake River tributary in Power County; Sailor Creek; Saint Joe River; Saint Maries River; Salmon Falls Creek; Salmon River; Secesh River; Selway River; Sheep Creek; Snake River; South Fork Boise River; South Fork Clearwater River
The Swan Falls Dam, the oldest hydroelectric dam on the Snake River, is located next to the community. [2] The Swan Falls Dam and Power Plant is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [3] The former Swan Falls Village was previously a large part of the community.
Snake River Canyon is a canyon formed by the Snake River in the Magic Valley region of southern Idaho, forming part of the boundary between Twin Falls County to the south and Jerome County to the north. The canyon ranges up to 500 feet (150 meters) deep and 0.25 miles (0.40 kilometers) wide, and runs for just over 50 miles. [1]
It is the third and final hydroelectric dam of the Hells Canyon Project, which includes Brownlee Dam (1959) and Oxbow Dam (1961), all built and operated by Idaho Power Company. The Hells Canyon Complex on the Snake River is the largest privately owned hydroelectric power complex in the nation, according to the US Energy Information ...