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Coles Creek State Park is a 1,800-acre (7.3 km 2) state park located on the Saint Lawrence River on the west bank of Coles Creek. The park is in the Town of Waddington in St. Lawrence County , New York .
Coles Creek State Park Marina in Waddington For a full list of benefits, rules and regulations regarding the pass, visit parks.ny.gov . Emily Barnes is the New York State Team consumer advocate ...
Picnic tables are available in the area. [3] Coles Creek Beach: Located on the less-frequented east side of Carlyle Lake, Coles Creek Beach (GPS coordinates: 38.656458, -89.266160) is adjacent to Coles Creek Campground, which includes picnic tables and restrooms, and Coles Creek Boat Ramp. It is smaller than McNair Beach. [4]
Coles Creek culture, a Late Woodland archaeological culture in the southern United States; Coles Creek (Mississippi), a tributary of the Mississippi River; Coles Creek (Pennsylvania), a tributary of Fishing Creek; Coles Creek State Park, in St. Lawrence County, New York
Coles Creek (also known as Cole's Creek [1]) is a tributary of Fishing Creek, in Columbia County, Pennsylvania, and Sullivan County, Pennsylvania, in the United States.It is 6.0 miles (9.7 km) long and is the first named tributary of Fishing Creek downstream of where East Branch Fishing Creek and West Branch Fishing Creek meet to form Fishing Creek.
Balmoral Mounds is an archaeological site of the Coles Creek culture in Tensas Parish, Louisiana. The site has components located both on the east and west sides of US 65 near Bayou Rousset. Description
The Crippen Point site is a Coles Creek culture archaeological site located in Sharkey County, Mississippi. It is the archaeological type site of the Crippen Point phase (1050 to 1200 CE) for Late Coles Creek culture in the Lower Mississippi valley. The phase marks a significant change in the cultural history of the area.
Boone's Mounds are a ceremonial site of the Coles Creek culture located in Calhoun County, Arkansas.The site is one of the largest mound sites in the Ouachita River valley. . Archeological excavation at the site has yielded dates of occupation as early as 600 AD, and it may still have been in use during the early contact period, c. 1