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The Blackfoot River, sometimes called the Big Blackfoot River to distinguish it from the Little Blackfoot River, is a snow-fed and spring-fed river in western Montana. The Blackfoot River begins in Lewis and Clark County at the Continental Divide, 10 miles (16 km) northeast of the town of Lincoln (4,536 ft; 1,383 m).
Lewis and Clark Pass is a mountain pass on the continental divide in Montana, United States, at an elevation of 6,424 feet (1,958 m) above sea level.The pass lies at the head of the drainages of the west-flowing Blackfoot River and the east-flowing Dearborn River, in the Helena National Forest in Lewis and Clark County.
Blackfoot River can refer to: Blackfoot River (Idaho) Blackfoot River (Montana) Little Blackfoot River, also in Montana This page was last edited on 9 ...
The Little Blackfoot River Bridge in Avon, Montana, is a contributing site to Montana's Historic Steel Truss Bridges, which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [32] The bridge, built for $2,540 ($77,263 in 2023 dollars) in 1914 by the O.E. Peppard construction firm, is 61 feet (19 m) long and 16 feet (4.9 m) wide.
For a history of the river and the people, see Grant-Kohrs family and history of Clark Fork River region. The Clark Fork and the Blackfoot River experienced a record flood in 1908. [18] Since the late 19th century many areas in the watershed of the river have been extensively mined for minerals, resulting in an ongoing stream pollution problem ...
Wild Montana is a member of the BCSP. Permanent protection of the Blackfoot River's most important tributaries will help preserve the health of the entire Blackfoot River watershed, as explained in a five-minute film Wild Montana produced called "Hallowed Waters: The Legacy and Lifeblood of the Big Blackfoot".
Blackfoot River (Montana) G. Gold Creek (Montana) L. List of lakes of Powell County, Montana; Little Blackfoot River This page was last edited on 28 May 2017, at 02: ...
A second reach, up the Clearwater River, joins the Blackfoot River at Clearwater. This basin joins the Clark Fork at Bonner. Upper valleys of the Clearwater-Blackfoot River basins run 394 miles (634 km) from Seeley Lake, eastward to Browns Lake along Montana Route 83 and Montana Route 200.