Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of rivers in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. By drainage basin ... USGS Hydrologic Unit Map - State of Wisconsin (1974) Wisconsin Watersheds & basins
The Yahara River (/ j ə ˈ h ær ə /) is a tributary of the Rock River in southern Wisconsin.It is about 62 miles (100 km) long [3] (including the distance across intervening lakes), and drains an area of 536 square miles (1,390 km 2). [4]
The Trade River is a 50.8-mile-long (81.8 km) tributary of the St. Croix River in northwestern Wisconsin in the United States. [1] In its history, it has been known by the names "Atanwa" or "Ottoway" River, both of which are Anglicized versions of an Ojibwe language word meaning "trade" (see Ottawa).
The Manitowoc River is formed in eastern Calumet County by its north and south branches: . The South Branch Manitowoc River, the longer of the two at 36.6 miles (58.9 km), [1] rises in northeastern Fond du Lac County and flows generally northeastwardly into Calumet County, passing the city of Chilton and collecting the Killsnake River.
The Maunesha is formed in the town of Bristol in Dane County from a collection of headwaters tributaries flowing from Columbia County.It flows generally eastward through northeastern Dane County (past the village of Marshall), northwestern Jefferson County (past the city of Waterloo) and southwestern Dodge County, where it joins the Crawfish River in the town of Portland.
The city of Green Bay, one of the first European settlements in the interior of North America, is on the river at its mouth on the Green Bay. Hydrographers divide the Fox into two distinct sections, the Upper Fox River, flowing from its headwaters in south-central Wisconsin northeasterly into Lake Winnebago , and the Lower Fox River, flowing ...
The maps of the Milwaukee area and the rest of Wisconsin are covered in towns, villages and cities — some of them with the same names, right next to each other.
The Eau Claire River is a tributary of the Chippewa River in west-central Wisconsin in the United States. [1] It is one of three rivers by this name in Wisconsin. Via the Chippewa River, it is part of the Mississippi River watershed. Its name is the French translation from the Ojibwe Wayaa-gonaatigweyaa-ziibi (Clear potable-water River).