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Map of the Missouri River watershed The White River flowing into the Missouri River and coloring it with clay. Tributaries of the Missouri River, a major river in the central United States, are listed here in upstream order. These lists are arranged into river sections between cities or mouths of major tributaries for ease of navigation.
Battle Creek (Milk River tributary) Belle Fourche River; Belt Creek (Montana) Big Muddy Creek (Missouri River tributary) Big Sioux River; Blackwater River (Missouri) Blue River (Missouri River tributary) Boyer River (Iowa) Brush Creek (Blue River tributary)
Carter Creek (Meramec River tributary) Castor River; Cave Spring Branch; Cedar Creek (Des Moines River tributary) Cedar Creek (Missouri River tributary) Cedar Creek (Sac River tributary) Chariton River (280 miles (450 km)) Cherry Valley Creek; Coldwater Creek (Missouri river tributary) Coldwater Creek (South Grand River tributary)
Map showing the Missouri River basin Garrison Dam, which forms Lake Sakakawea, the largest reservoir on the Missouri River. This is a list of dams in the watershed of the Missouri River, a tributary of the Mississippi River, in the United States. There are an estimated 17,200 dams and reservoirs in the basin, most of which are small, local ...
B. Bachelor Creek (Missouri) Back Creek (Missouri) Bagby Branch; Bailey Branch (Barren Fork tributary) Bailey Branch (Camp Creek tributary) Bailey Branch (Courtois Creek tributary)
The Loutre River as seen at the Loutre Lick Public Fishing Access south west of Mineola, Missouri. The Loutre River is a 58.4-mile-long (94.0 km) [1] tributary of the Missouri River in the United States. The Loutre River begins in Audrain County. It flows into the Missouri River from the north in Montgomery County opposite the town of Hermann.
The Niobrara River (/ ˌ n aɪ. ə ˈ b r ær ə /; Omaha–Ponca: Ní Ubthátha khe, pronounced [nĩꜜ ubɫᶞaꜜɫᶞa kʰe], literally "water spread-out horizontal-the" or "The Wide-Spreading Water") is a tributary of the Missouri River, approximately 568 miles (914 km) long, [2] running through the U.S. states of Wyoming and Nebraska. [3]
Following at a distance of years the first recorded exploration of the majority of the valley by the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804–1806), there have been numerous attempts at preserving the natural habitats of the Missouri River Valley, spurred in its early days by concerns of duck hunters, for the Missouri basin lies across a major ...