Profile surveys in Snake River basin, Idaho

Water Supply Paper 347
Prepared under the direction of R. B. Marshall, Chief Geographer
By:

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Abstract

Snake River, the largest tributary of the Columbia, rises among the high peaks of the Rocky Mountains in Yellowstone National Park, heading in the divide from which streams flow northward and eastward into the Missouri, southward to the Colorado and the lakes of the Great Basin, and westward to the Columbia. From the headwater region, including Shoshone, Lewis, and Heart lakes, in Yellowstone National Park, the river flows southward, broadening into Jackson Lake (4 miles wide and 18 miles long) and passing through Jackson Valley (8 miles wide and 40 miles long), beyond which, near the Idaho-Wyoming line, it enters a long canyon. At the south edge of Madison County, Idaho, it receives Henrys Fork, below which the Snake flows southward and westward across Idaho to a point near Homedale, near the Oregon-Idaho line, where it turns abruptly northward and beyond which it forms for about 170 miles the boundary between Idaho and Oregon and for 30 miles more that between Idaho and Washington. It enters Washington at Lewiston, flows northwest, west, and southwest, and joins the Columbia near Pasco.

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Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Profile surveys in Snake River basin, Idaho
Series title Water Supply Paper
Series number 347
DOI 10.3133/wsp347
Edition -
Year Published 1914
Language English
Publisher U.S. Government Printing Office
Publisher location Washington, D.C.
Description Report: 12 p.; 37 Plates
Country United States
State Idaho;Nevada;Oregon;Utah;Washington;Wyoming
Other Geospatial Snake River Basin
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