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White River Drainage Basin. Mississippi River. White River. Arkansas Post Canal; La Grue Bayou; Big Creek; Cache River. Bayou De View; Bayou des Arc; Little Red River
The stream flows generally north through the Kings River Falls Natural Area. It passes under Arkansas Highway 74 and past Kingston and flows roughly parallel to Arkansas Highway 21 then turns northwest to pass U.S. Route 412 just east of Marble. It continues to the northwest becoming a portion of the Madison - Carroll county line east of Rockhouse.
The annual daily mean discharge of the river near Doniphan, Missouri is 2,815 cubic feet (79.7 m 3) per second. [4] In 1964, over 134 mi (160 km) of the upper course of the river and its tributaries were federally protected as the Ozark National Scenic Riverways , [ 5 ] the first national park in America to protect a river system.
The stream passes under Arkansas Highway 303 just west of War Eagle and makes a sharp turn (incised meander) to the south. The stream enters the waters of Beaver Lake just prior to re-entering Washington County. Prior to the creation of Beaver Lake, the stream entered the White River about three miles to the west-southwest. [4]
At a point about 15 miles (24 km) above the Park boundary in Newton County, Arkansas, the Buffalo River begins as the Main Prong of Big Buffalo Creek.The river flows north through Boxley to Ponca, where it then begins an eastward trek across northern Arkansas to its confluence with the White River on the Marion-Baxter County line.
The Cossatot is known as a difficult (class II - IV+) whitewater stream to canoeists and kayakers and a section at Cossatot Falls in Howard County, Arkansas has been called "the most challenging section of whitewater between the Smokies and the Rockies," though there are many more challenging runs in the state of Arkansas, such as Richland ...
Mountain Fork, also known as the Mountain Fork of the Little River, is a 98-mile-long (158 km) [1] tributary of the Little River in western Arkansas and southeastern Oklahoma in the United States. Via the Little and Red rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River. The stream rises in the Ouachita Mountains.
The Little Missouri Falls is a sizable waterfall on the upper reaches of the Little Missouri River in southwest Arkansas in the Ouachita National Forest. It is a stairstep fall in a deep gorge. The falls can be reached by an all-weather gravel road, and there is a parking area with restrooms and a paved trail leading to observation sites.