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Roaring River (South Fork McKenzie River) Rogue River (Oregon) Rogue River (South Yamhill River) Row River; Salmon River (Clackamas County, Oregon) Salmon River (Lincoln County, Oregon) Salmonberry River; Salt Creek (Middle Fork Willamette River) Sandy River; Santiam River; Scoggins Creek; Shitepoke Creek; Shitten Creek; Siletz River; Siltcoos ...
The Salmon River flows from the Central Oregon Coast Range to the Pacific Ocean coast of northwest Oregon in the United States. [1] About 24 miles (39 km) long, [4] it begins and ends in Lincoln County but also flows briefly through western Polk and southern Tillamook counties. Much of its course lies within the Siuslaw National Forest. [7]
It is open to fishing year-round from boats or from the shore. [16] The situation below Bowman Dam, which creates the reservoir, is quite different. According to Fishing in Oregon, the Crooked River is "one of the most productive trout streams in Oregon." [15] Most productive are the 7 miles (11 km) of easily accessible stream below the dam. [15]
The river then passes Skinner Butte Park, which is on the left, and under Interstate 105 (I-105). Turning north, the river flows between East Bank Park on the right and West Bank Park on the left and passes under the Greenway Bike Bridge and then the Owosso Bike Bridge before passing under Oregon Route 569 (Beltline Highway) and leaving the city.
Malheur River; Marys River (Oregon) McKenzie River (Oregon) Miami River (Oregon) Middle Fork Coquille River; Middle Fork John Day River; Middle Fork Owyhee River; Middle Fork Rogue River; Middle Fork Willamette River; Middle Santiam River; Mill Creek (Marion County, Oregon) Mill Creek (Mohawk River tributary) Miller Creek (Klamath County, Oregon)
Source data for the table below came from topographic maps created by the United States Geological Survey and published on-line by TopoQuest, [2] and from the Atlas of Oregon; [1] the Oregon Atlas and Gazetteer; [3] two federally produced geographic information system (GIS) datasets—the National Hydrography Dataset and the National Watershed ...
The North Umpqua River is a tributary of the Umpqua River, about 106 miles (171 km) long, in southwestern Oregon in the United States. It drains a scenic and rugged area of the Cascade Range southeast of Eugene , flowing through steep canyons and surrounded by large Douglas-fir forests.
Constrained by dikes, the channel is about one-third as wide as the lower Willamette main stem. [3] U.S. Route 30 and tracks of the Burlington Northern Railroad run roughly parallel to the channel, and to its left, between its source and the Multnomah–Columbia county border at about the channel's river mile (RM) 12.5 or river kilometer (RK) 20.1.