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Brock Creek rises near the southwest corner of Lower Makefield Township just east of Interstate 95 at an elevation of 140 feet (43 m), flowing generally east then northeast, turning northerly before it enters Yardley Borough and meets at Buck Creek's 0.60 river mile at an elevation of 49 feet (15 m).
Popular attractions in Bucks County include the shops and studios of New Hope, Peddler's Village (in Lahaska), Washington Crossing Historic Park, New Hope Railroad, Bucks County River Country and Bucks County Playhouse Theater (in New Hope). Rice's Market near Lahaska is a popular destination on Tuesday mornings.
More: Bucks County weekend fall fun: Fallsington Day, scary strolls, pumpkin patch rides & more Lower Bucks Tyler State Park and Neshaminy State Park are each less than an hour from Center City.
Martins Creek (Delaware River tributary, Bucks County) Mill Creek (Delaware River tributary) Mill Creek (Neshaminy Creek tributary, Doylestown Township) Mill Creek (Neshaminy Creek tributary, Northampton Township) Mill Creek (Neshaminy Creek tributary, Wrightstown Township) Mink Run (Tohickon Creek tributary) Morgan Creek (Tohickon Creek tributary)
Hawk Mountain. Once a place for state-sponsored bird poachers (in the 1920s, Pennsylvania paid $5 a head to kill the large, bulky goshawk), Hawk Mountain is today a world-renowned sanctuary for ...
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The watershed of the Neshaminy Creek covers an area of approximately 236 square miles (610 km 2), 86 percent of which is located in Bucks County and 14 percent in Montgomery County. It is part of the greater Delaware River watershed. The creek's course runs mostly through suburban areas to the north of Philadelphia. However, the course of the ...
Mill Creek is one of the three tributaries of the Neshaminy Creek bearing the name and one of six Mill Creeks in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. [1] Rising in Doylestown Township, Mill Creek runs about 2 miles (3.2 km) to its confluence at Neshaminy Creek's 36.40 river mile.