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The Kentucky River basin, including North Fork and its tributaries, suffered a major flood in January and February 1957. [22] Hazard was the worst hit place in the entire basin, with all highways blocked, all utilities out of operation, and the main streets under anywhere up to 17 feet (5.2 m) of floodwater. [ 23 ]
Mud River; Nolin River; North Fork Kentucky River; Ohio River; Paint Creek; Pond River; Red Bird River; Red River (eastern Kentucky) Red River (western Kentucky) Rockcastle River; Rolling Fork of the Salt River; Rough River; Russell Fork of the Big Sandy River; Salt Lick Creek (Kentucky) Salt River; Sap Branch; Silver Creek; Sinking Creek ...
North Fork Kentucky River is a river in Kentucky in the United States. [3] It is a fork of the Kentucky River that it joins just upstream of Beattyville . [ 3 ] It is nearly 148 miles (238 km) long with an average slope of 3.2 feet per mile (0.61 m/km), [ 1 ] and an overall basin size (at Jackson) of 1,101 square miles (2,850 km 2 ) [ 4 ]
Troublesome Creek in Hindman, Kentucky. Troublesome Creek is a creek in Breathitt, Perry and Knott counties, Kentucky, a fork of the North Fork Kentucky River. [1] It is 41.46 miles (66.72 km) long with a gradient of 8.92 feet per mile (168.9 cm/km), normally free-flowing, and with banks that vary between tree-lined and open.
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A survey of the reach between the Salt Works and the Soft Fork mouth was performed in 1836–1837. [7] It recorded the entire length as 68.5 miles (110.2 km) descending 206.7 feet (63.0 m) in total, [7] with the South Fork portion being 42 miles (68 km) and 131.5 feet (40.1 m) of that. [6]
The incident happened along the North Fork of the Kentucky River in the Blackey community of Letcher County. The coroner’s office said the boy, 11-year-old Curtis Halcomb, was playing along the ...
The watershed of the Licking River, with the North Fork and South Fork Licking River tributaries. The Licking River rises in the Cumberland Plateau of eastern Kentucky, in southeastern Magoffin County (37°31'16"N 82°55'56"W) [5] at the confluence of two smaller streams and an elevation of 1006 feet. [6]