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The Portolà expedition camped on the river on July 20, 1769 and named it for Saint Margaret of Antioch. A Santa Margarita rancheria is mentioned in 1795 and there is a February 23, 1836 land grant called Santa Margarita y San Onofre (later renamed Rancho Santa Margarita y Las Flores). [3]
A map of the Atbara River drainage basin. Mareb River (or Gash River) (only reaches the Atbarah in times of flood) Obel River; Belessa; Tekezé River (or Takkaze or Setit) Zarima River; Ataba River; Wari River. Qortem Zer'a; Tsaliet. Agefet. Ab'aro; Azef River; Amblo; Korowya; Ferrey River; Kidane Mihret River; May Meqa; Graliwdo; Giba River ...
The chief river of Ethiopia flowing east is the Awash River (or Awasi), which rises in the Shewan uplands and makes a semicircular bend first southeast and then northeast. It reaches the Afar Depression through a broad breach in the eastern escarpment of the plateau, beyond which it is joined on its left bank by its chief affluent, the Germama ...
[24] The beaver may have accessed San Mateo Creek from the Santa Margarita River watershed where golden beaver were re-introduced around 1940. [25] Indirect evidence of beaver in San Diego County includes a creek named Beaver Hollow which runs 3.25 miles into the Sweetwater River about 6.5 miles southwest of Alpine.
Santa Margarita, California, a town in San Luis Obispo County . Santa Margarita de Cortona Asistencia, an 18th-century mission near the town; Santa Margarita Lake; Rancho Santa Margarita, California, a city in Orange County
The Tekezé River [1] (Amharic: ተከዜ; Tigrinya: ተከዘ, originally meaning "river" in Ge’ez; Arabic: تكازي, also spelled Takkaze; Italian: fiume Tacazzè), [2] is a major river in Ethiopia. For part of its course it forms a section of the westernmost border of Ethiopia and Eritrea.
The Meki is a river in central Oromia, Ethiopia.It empties into Hora-Dambal.. O.G.S. Crawford identifies the Meki with a river on a map which was drawn in 1662 (there named "Machy") to illustrate Manuel de Almeida's history of Ethiopia.
The Bashilo River (less often known as the Beshitta) is located in Ethiopia. Known for its canyon, which one source describes as almost as extensive as the canyon of its parent the Abay, [1] also known as the Blue Nile, the river originates just west of Kutaber in the Amhara Region. Flowing first in a northwesterly direction to where the ...