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The Delaware River looking north above Walpack Bend near Walpack, New Jersey, where the river leaves the historic Minisink region, a buried valley eroded from the Marcellus Formation The watershed of the Delaware River drains an area of 14,119 square miles (36,570 km 2 ) and encompasses 42 counties and 838 municipalities in five U.S. states ...
Stony Creek Technologies was a company that discharged into the creek. [4] [5] The company later sold he site adjacent to the creek. Federal courts found that the new property owners must pay for environmental cleanup costs that occurred before they acquired it. [6] [7] The so-called Metro Container site along the creek is a Superfund Site.
Naamans Creek (spelled Naaman Creek on federal maps) [2] is a tributary of the Delaware River that is located in northeast New Castle County, Delaware and southeast Delaware County, Pennsylvania. [ 3 ]
Martins Creek (Delaware River tributary, Bucks County) Martins Creek (Delaware River tributary) Matson Run; Mill Creek (Delaware River tributary) Mingo Creek (Schuylkill River tributary) Mongaup River; Musconetcong River
Agricultural Ditch, Sussex County; Ake Ditch, Sussex County Alapocas Run, New Castle County [[Allabands Mill Stream (Isaac Branch tributary)|Allabands Mill Stream]], Kent County
Interstate 95 and Amtrak Northeast Corridor Bridges crossing over the creek. Poquessing Creek is a 10.3-mile-long (16.6 km) creek, [1] a right tributary of the Delaware River, that forms the boundary between Philadelphia and Bensalem Township, which borders it to the northeast along the Delaware.
The Smyrna River is a 7.3-mile-long (11.7 km) [3] river in central Delaware in the United States. It rises east of Smyrna, Delaware, at the confluence of Duck Creek and Mill Creek. [3] It flows generally northeast, forming the boundary between Kent and New Castle counties. It enters Delaware Bay approximately 6 miles (10 km) northeast of Smyrna ...
While all streams and rivers in Pennsylvania natively boasted a presence of Brook Trout, only Chester Creek still most-likely holds this feat. Furthermore, Freshwater Eels are still making their pilgrimage up the river, with sightings in both the East and West Branches, many miles upstream. These two facts alone indicate a very healthy ecosystem.