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The Highland Park Bridge crosses the Allegheny River at Aspinwall, Pennsylvania, just above Allegheny River Lock and Dam No. 2. The river enters both Allegheny and Westmoreland counties, the Pittsburgh suburbs, and the City of Pittsburgh from the northeast. It passes the North Side, downtown Pittsburgh, and Point State Park.
Allegheny River • average: 2.50 cu ft/s (0.071 m 3 /s) at mouth with Allegheny River [5] Basin features; Progression: south-southeast [4] River system: Allegheny River: Tributaries • left: unnamed tributaries • right: unnamed tributaries: Bridges: US 62
The Allegheny River drainage basin covers parts of New York and Pennsylvania in the United States. The Allegheny River drainage basin is part of the Mississippi riverine system. This article contains a list of tributaries of the Allegheny River, a stream in the U.S. states of New York and Pennsylvania. (Mouth at the Ohio River) New York Sources:
The Tributaries of the Allegheny River drain western Pennsylvania and part of New York. The following table lists all the named tributaries of the Allegheny River . For each stream, the name, tributary number, coordinate and political subdivision of the confluence, and coordinate of the source are given.
Rivers and streams which drain the Allegheny River watershed, part of the Ohio and thence Mississippi riverine systems and watersheds. Direct and indirect tributaries of the Allegheny River . Map of the Allegheny River drainage basin .
Allegheny River • average: 4.04 cu ft/s (0.114 m 3 /s) at mouth with Allegheny River [5] Basin features; Progression: south and southwest [4] River system: Allegheny River: Tributaries • left: unnamed tributaries • right: unnamed tributaries: Bridges: US 62
Buffalo Creek is a tributary of the Allegheny River in Armstrong and Butler counties, Pennsylvania in the United States. [ 1 ] Buffalo Creek joins the Allegheny River at the borough of Freeport .
The “Upper Allegheny” River began in McKean County, south of Bradford flowing north into New York. Possibly following Conawango Creek to the Lake Erie basin to join the ancestral St. Lawrence River through Canada. [1] The “Middle Allegheny” River began in Warren County, east of Warren.