Highest Mountains

October 18th, 2008 by admin

Highest Mountains - US List

1. Mount Everest / Chomolungma 8,848 29,028 Khumbu Himalaya Nepal / Tibet
2 K2 8,611 28,251 Baltoro Karakoram Pakistan / Sinkiang
3 Kangchenjunga 8,586 28,169 Kangchenjunga Himalaya Nepal / India
4 Lhotse 8,516 27,940 Khumbu Himalaya Nepal / Tibet
5 Makalu 8,485 27,838 Khumbu Himalaya Nepal / Tibet
6 Cho Oyu 8,188 26,864 Khumbu Himalaya Nepal / Tibet
7 Dhaulagiri 8,167 26,795 Dhaulagiri Himalaya Nepal
8 Manaslu 8,163 26,781 Manaslu Himalaya Nepal
9 Nanga Parbat 8,125 26,657 Nanga Parbat Himalaya Kashmir (Pakistan)
10 Annapurna I 8,091 26,545 Annapurna Himalaya Nepal

Tallest mountains in each continent
Mount Everest, Asia (8,850 m)
Aconcagua, South America (6,959 m)
Mount McKinley (Denali), North America (6,194 m)
Kilimanjaro, Africa (5,895 m)
Mount Elbrus, Europe (5,642 m)
Vinson Massif, Antarctica (4,897 m)
Mount Kosciuszko, Australia (2,228 m) or Puncak Jaya, Papua, Oceania (4,884 m) (also known as Carstenz Pyramid)

The 10 highest mountains in Europe,

1. Elbrus 5.633 Russia Europe

2. Rustiveli 5.201 Russia Europe

3. Dykh-Tau 5.198 Russia Europe

4. Agri Dagi (Mt Ararat) 5.137 Turkey Europe

5. Bykagri 5.123 Turkey Europe

6. Kazbek 5.047 Russia Europe

7. Monte Bianco 4.807 Italy/France Europe

8. Klyuchevskaya 4.750 Russia Europe

9. Ushba 4.710 Russia Europe

10. Monte Rosa 4.634 Italy/Switzerland Europe

10 Tallest mountains in North America

1. McKinley 6.194 Alaska North America

2. Logan 5.951 Canada North America

3. Citlaltepetl (el Pico de Orizaba) 5.754 Mexico North America

4. Mt St Elias 5.490 Canada North America

5. Popocatepetl 5.452 Mexico North America

6. Foraker 5.303 Alaska North America

7. Ixaccihuatl 5.286 Mexico North America

8. Lucania 5.228 Canada North America

9. Steele 5.074 Canada North America

10. Mt Blackburn 5.037 Alaska North America

10 Tallest mountains in South America

1. Aconcagua 6.962 Argentina South America

2. Ojos del Salado 6.880 Chile South America

3. Bonete 6.872 Argentina South America

4. Mercedario 6.770 Argentina/Chile South America

5. Huascaran 6.768 Peru South America

6. Llullaillaco 6.723 Argentina/Chile South America

7. El Libertador 6.720 Argentina South America

8. Yerupaja 6.617 Peru South America

9. Tupungato 6.550 Argentina/Chile South America

10. Sajama 6.542 Bolivia South America

10 Tallest mountains in Africa

1. Kilimanjaro 5.963 Tanzania Africa

2. Uhuro Point 5.962 Tanzania Africa

3. Batian Peak (Mt Kenya) 5.201 Kenya Africa

4. Kirinyaga 5.200 Kenya Africa

5. Nelion 5.190 Kenya Africa

6. Margherita Peak 5.119 Zaire/Uganda Africa

7. Stanley 5.110 Uganda/Zaire Africa

8. Mt Speke 4.890 Zaire/Uganda Africa

9. Mt Baker 4.844 Zaire/Uganda Africa

10. Mt Emin 4.792 Zaire/Uganda Africa

6 Tallest mountains in Antarctica

1. Vinson Massif 4897 Antarctica

2. Mount Tyree 4852m Antarctica

3. Mt. Shinn 4661 Antarctica

4. Mt. Craddock 4650m Antarctica

5. Gardner 4587

6. Kirkpatrick 4.528 Antarctica

Other high mountains in continent

Epperly 4359
Mount Fridtjof Nansen (2,740 m)
Mount Jackson (3,050 m)
Mount Markham (4,350 m)
Mount Terror (3,230 m)

10 Tallest mountains in Oceania

1. Puncak Jaya 5.030 Indonesia/ New Guinea Oceania

2. Naga Pulu 4.862 Indonesia Oceania

3. Mt Wilhelm 4.510 Papua New Guinea Oceania

4. Giluwe 4.368 Papua New Guinea Oceania

5. Kinabalu 4.094 Malaysia Oceania

6. Kerintji 3.809 Indonesia Oceania

7. Mt Hagen 3.778 Papua New Guinea Oceania

8. Cook 3.764 New Zealand Oceania

9. Rinjani 3.727 Indonesia Oceania

10. Semeru 3.677 Indonesia Oceania 0.02% 100.00%

Largest States

October 18th, 2008 by admin

Largest States - US Lists

This is a list of states of the United States by population (with inhabited non-state jurisdictions included for comparison) as of July 1, 2007, according to the 2007 estimates of the United States Census Bureau. The total population of the United States was 281,421,906 at the 2000 Census. As of July 1, 2007, the estimated population of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the other insular areas of the United States was 305,986,357. Notably, the top nine states in population contain slightly more than half of the total population. The twenty-five lowest-population states contain less than one-sixth of the total population. The United States Census counts most persons present on the territory of the United States other than short-term visitors, including citizens, non-citizen permanent residents, non-citizen long-term visitors, and illegal aliens. In addition, those serving abroad in the United States Armed Forces and their dependents are also counted in their home state.

Based on data from the decennial census. each state is allocated a proportion of the 435 seats in the United States House of Representatives, though regardless of population, each state is guaranteed a minimum of one seat. The Electoral College is the body that, every four years, elects the President and Vice President of the United States. Each state’s representation in the Electoral College is equal to that state’s total number of members in both houses of the United States Congress. The Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution, the District of Columbia, which lies outside of the jurisdiction of any state, is granted as many votes in the Electoral College as it would have if it were a state, but no more than is given the state with the lowest representation in that body, which is three. Thus, the total representation in the College is 538 members (equal to 100 senators plus 435 representatives, plus 3 members for the District of Columbia). The 11 most populous states have a majority of the electoral college votes, enough to elect the President.

Rank state/territory total (sq mi) (km²) land (sq mi) (km²) water (sq mi) (km²) % water
1 Alaska 663,267 1,717,854 571,951 1,481,346 91,316 236,507 13.77
2 Texas 268,581 695,622 261,797 678,051 6,784 17,570 2.53
3 California 163,696 423,971 155,959 403,932 7,736 20,036 4.73
4 Montana 147,042 380,837 145,552 376,978 1,490 3,859 1.01
5 New Mexico 121,589 314,914 121,356 314,311 234 606 0.19
6 Arizona 113,998 295,253 113,635 294,313 364 943 0.32
7 Nevada 110,561 286,352 109,826 284,448 735 1,904 0.66
8 Colorado 104,094 269,602 103,718 268,628 376 974 0.36
9 Oregon 98,381 254,806 95,997 248,631 2,384 6,175 2.42
10 Wyoming 97,814 253,337 97,100 251,488 713 1,847 0.73
11 Michigan 96,716 250,493 56,804 147,122 39,912 103,372 41.27
12 Minnesota 86,939 225,171 79,610 206,189 7,329 18,982 8.43
13 Utah 84,899 219,887 82,144 212,752 2,755 7,135 3.25
14 Idaho 83,570 216,445 82,747 214,314 823 2,132 0.98
15 Kansas 82,277 213,096 81,815 211,900 462 1,197 0.56
16 Nebraska 77,354 200,346 76,872 199,098 481 1,246 0.62
17 South Dakota 77,116 199,730 75,885 196,541 1,232 3,191 1.60
18 Washington 71,300 184,666 66,544 172,348 4,756 12,318 6.67
19 North Dakota 70,700 183,112 68,976 178,647 1,724 4,465 2.44
20 Oklahoma 69,898 181,035 68,667 177,847 1,231 3,188 1.76
21 Missouri 69,704 180,533 68,886 178,414 818 2,119 1.17
22 Florida 65,755 170,305 53,927 139,670 11,828 30,634 17.99
23 Wisconsin 65,498 169,639 54,310 140,662 11,188 28,977 17.08
24 Georgia 59,425 153,910 57,906 149,976 1,519 3,934 2.56
25 Illinois 57,914 149,997 55,584 143,962 2,331 6,037 4.02
26 Iowa 56,272 145,744 55,869 144,700 402 1,041 0.71
27 New York 54,556 141,299 47,214 122,284 7,342 19,016 13.46
28 North Carolina 53,819 139,391 48,711 126,161 5,108 13,230 9.49
29 Arkansas 53,179 137,733 52,068 134,856 1,110 2,875 2.09
30 Alabama 52,419 135,765 50,744 131,426 1,675 4,338 3.20
31 Louisiana 51,840 134,265 43,562 112,825 8,278 21,440 15.97
32 Mississippi 48,430 125,433 46,907 121,489 1,523 3,945 3.15
33 Pennsylvania 46,055 119,282 44,817 116,075 1,239 3,209 2.69
34 Ohio 44,825 116,096 40,948 106,055 3,877 10,041 8.65
35 Virginia 42,774 110,784 39,594 102,548 3,180 8,236 7.43
36 Tennessee 42,143 109,150 41,217 106,752 926 2,398 2.20
37 Kentucky 40,409 104,659 39,728 102,895 681 1,764 1.68
38 Indiana 36,418 94,322 35,867 92,895 551 1,427 1.51
39 Maine 35,385 91,647 30,862 79,932 4,523 11,715 12.78
40 South Carolina 32,020 82,931 30,109 77,982 1,911 4,949 5.97
41 West Virginia 24,230 62,755 24,078 62,362 152 394 0.63
42 Maryland 12,407 32,134 9,774 25,315 2,633 6,819 21.22
43 Hawaii 10,931 28,311 6,423 16,635 4,508 11,676 41.24
44 Massachusetts 10,555 27,337 7,840 20,306 2,715 7,032 25.72
45 Vermont 9,614 24,900 9,250 23,957 365 945 3.79
46 New Hampshire 9,350 24,216 8,968 23,227 382 989 4.08
47 New Jersey 8,721 22,587 7,417 19,210 1,304 3,377 14.95
48 Connecticut 5,543 14,356 4,845 12,548 699 1,810 12.60
49 Delaware 2,489 6,446 1,954 5,061 536 1,388 21.52
50 Rhode Island 1,545 4,002 1,045 2,707 500 1,295 32.37
District of Columbia 68 176 61 158 7 18 10.16
Puerto Rico 5,325 13,792 3,425 8,871 1,900 4,921 35.68
Northern Mariana Islands 1,975 5,115 179 464 1,796 4,652 90.93
US Virgin Islands 737 1,909 134 347 604 1,564 81.87
American Samoa 584 1,513 77 199 506 1,311 86.75
Guam 571 1,479 210 544 361 935 63.22
US Minor Outlying Islands 16 41 16 41 0 0 0.00
50 states + DC 3,794,083 9,826,630 3,537,438 9,161,922 256,645 664,707 6.76
all US territory 3,803,290 9,850,476 3,541,479 9,172,389 261,811 678,087 6.88

Highest Grossing Movies - US List

October 17th, 2008 by admin

Highest Grossing Movies - US List

1     Titanic             $1,845,034,189     1997
2     The Lord of the Rings: The Retu    $1,119,000,000     2003
3     Pirates of the Caribbean: D     $1,066,179,725     2006
4     The Dark Knight         $990,190,914     2008
5     Harry Potter and the Philosoph     $976,475,550     2001
6     Pirates of the Caribbean: At a     $960,996,492     2007
7     Harry Potter and the Order of      $938,468,864     2007
8     The Lord of the Rings: The Two     $926,287,400     2002
9     Star Wars Episode I: The Phanto    $924,317,558     1999
10     Shrek 2     DreamWorks SKG     $919,838,758     2004
11     Jurassic Park     Universal     $914,691,118     1993
12     Harry Potter and the Goblet o     $896,016,159     2005
13     Spider-Man 3     Sony/Columbia     $890,871,626     2007
14     Harry Potter and the Chamber      $878,988,482     2002
15     The Lord of the Rings: The Fe    $871,368,364     2001
16     Finding Nemo              $864,625,978     2003
17     Star Wars Episode III: Reven    $850,000,605     2005
18     Spider-Man             $821,708,551     2002
19     Independence Day         $816,969,268     1996
20     Shrek the Third          $797,641,069     2007
21     Harry Potter and the Prisoner      $795,900,000     2004
22     E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial     $792,910,554     1982
23     Indiana Jones and the Kingdom      $783,877,123     2008
24     The Lion King     Walt Disney      $783,841,776     1994
25     Spider-Man 2     Sony Pictures     $783,766,341     2004
26     Star Wars Episode IV: A New H    $775,398,007     1977
27     The Da Vinci Code     Colum     $744,717,957     2005
29     The Matrix Reloaded     .     $738,599,701     2003
30     Transformers     Paramount    $708,226,810     2007
31     Forrest Gump     Paramount     $677,387,716     1994
32     The Sixth Sense     B     $672,806,292     1999
33     Pirates of the Caribbean: The     $654,264,015     2003
34     Ice Age: The Meltdown          $651,564,743     2006
35     Star Wars Episode II: Attack      $649,398,328     2002
36     The Incredibles          $631,442,092     2004
37     Kung Fu Panda     DreamWorks SKG     $628,226,854     2008
38     Ratatouille              $621,421,108     2007
39     The Lost World: Jurassic Park      $618,638,999     1997
40     Hancock     Sony/Columbia     $614,946,274     2008
41     The Passion of the Christ     $611,899,420     2004
42     Casino Royale              $594,239,066     2006
43     War of the Worlds          $591,745,528     2005
44     Men in Black     Sony/Columbia     $589,390,539     1997
45     I Am Legend     Warner Bros.     $584,015,483     2007
46     Night at the Museum          $574,466,317     2006
47     Iron Man     Paramount     $573,933,482     2008
48     Armageddon     Buena Vista     $553,709,788     1998
49     King Kong     Universal     $550,316,795     2005
50     Mission Impossible II     Param   $546,388,105     2000

The Kootebay River - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

The Kootenay River - US List

The Kootenay River (spelled Kootenai River for its American portions) is the uppermost major tributary of the Columbia River, flowing through British Columbia, Montana and Idaho. It is one of the few rivers in North America which begins in Canada, enters the United States and then reenters Canada.
Contents

The Kootenay originates in the Rocky Mountains of eastern British Columbia, and initially flows south through Kootenay National Park, merging into the Rocky Mountain Trench near Canal Flats, British Columbia (here it passes within a kilometer of Columbia Lake, the headwaters of the Columbia). It continues southwards along the Trench towards the United States border, and at Wardner, British Columbia, it widens into the Lake Koocanusa reservoir created by the Libby Dam near Libby, Montana. Koocanausa spans the Canada-U.S. border; below the dam the river resumes (using the Kootenai spelling), veers westwards out of the Rocky Mountain Trench, collects the tributary Fisher River, Yaak River, and Moyie River, crosses into Idaho, passes through Bonners Ferry, then turns northwards again. It re-enters Canada south of Creston, British Columbia, and widens into Kootenay Lake. At Nelson, British Columbia the Kootenay becomes a river again, now flowing southwest towards Castlegar, where it joins the Columbia River.

The Kootenay River is 780 kilometres (485 mi) long. Its drainage basin is 50,200 square kilometres (19,400 sq mi) large, of which 37,700 square kilometres (14,600 sq mi) are in Canada and 12,600 square kilometres (4,860 sq mi) are in the United States.[2]

The river is a Class I water from the Libby Dam downstream to the Idaho border for the purposes of public access for recreational purposes[4].

[edit] History

The Kootenay River is named for the indigenous Kootenai people. In written records from the early 19th century the Kootenai people were sometimes called the Flatbows, and the river called the Flatbow River. David Thompson traveled down the river in 1808 as part of his effort to establish a fur trading district in the Columbia River system. In 1809 Thompson named the river McGillivray’s River, in honor of Duncan McGillivray and William McGillivray, partners of the North West Company who had strongly supported Thompson’s work.[5][6]

In the 1970s, it was proposed that the Kootenay River be diverted into the Columbia River (the two rivers are separated by a distance of no more than one mile in the Rocky Mountain Trench in southeastern British Columbia). This would allow for the generation of increased hydroelectric power. The proposal was strongly opposed by both environmentalists as well as local residents. The economy of southeastern British Columbia is strongly dependent on tourism, with the Columbia River, including Columbia Lake and Windermere Lake, being very popular for summer swimming and boating activities. Diversion of the glacier-fed Kootenay River would have resulted in the Columbia River becoming much deeper and colder, flooding lake-side residences and damaging tourism. As a result, this proposed river diversion was never undertaken

Pend Oreille River - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

Pend Oreille River - US List

The Pend Oreille is a tributary of the Columbia River, approximately 130 miles (209 km) long, in northern Idaho and northeastern Washington in the United States, as well as southeastern British Columbia in Canada. In its passage through British Columbia its name is spelled Pend d’Oreille River. It drains a scenic area of the Rocky Mountains along the U.S.-Canada border on the east side of the Columbia. The river is sometimes defined as the lower part of the Clark Fork, which rises in western Montana. The river drains an area of 66,800 square kilometres (25,792 sq mi),[2] mostly through the Clark Fork and its tributaries in western Montana and including a portion of the Flathead River in southeastern British Columbia. The full drainage basin of the river and its tributaries accounts for 43% of the entire Columbia River Basin.[8]
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Course
* 2 Dams
* 3 Names
* 4 References

[edit] Course

The Pend Oreille River begins at Lake Pend Oreille in Bonner County, Idaho in the Idaho Panhandle, draining the lake from its western end near Sandpoint (The Clark Fork River enters the lake from its eastern end). It flows west, receiving the Priest River from the north at the town of Priest River, then flows into southern Pend Oreille County in northeastern Washington at Newport. Once in Washington it turns north, flowing along the eastern side of the Selkirk Mountains. It flows roughly parallel to the Idaho border for approximately 50 miles (80 km), through the Colville National Forest, past Tiger and Metaline Falls. It crosses the international border into southeastern British Columbia, looping west for about 15 miles (24 km) and joining the Columbia from the east, approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) north of the international border and approximately 5 miles (8 km) south of Montrose.

[edit] Dams

There are five dams on the Pend Oreille River: Waneta (owned by Teck Cominco) and Seven Mile (B.C. Hydro) dams in Canada, Boundary (Seattle City Light), Box Canyon (Pend Oreille County PUD), and Albeni Falls (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) dams in the United States. None provide for fish passage.

Variant names, according to the USGS, include: Bitter Root River, Bitterroot River, Clark Fork, Clarke Fork, Clarkes Fork, Clarks Fork, Deer Lodge River, Hell Gate River, Missoula River, Pend d’Oreille River, Silver Bow River, Clark’s Fork, and Pend-d’Oreille River.

Related Blogs

Kettle River - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

Kettle River - US List

Kettle river is a 175-mile (282 km) tributary of the Columbia River in northeastern Washington in the United States and southeastern British Columbia in Canada. Its drainage basin is 4,200 square miles (11,000 km2) large, of which 3,177 square miles (8,230 km2) are in Canada and 1,023 square miles (2,650 km2) in the United States.[2]
Contents

From its source in the Monashee Mountains of British Columbia, the Kettle River flows south to Midway, British Columbia. Along the way it is joined by many tributaries, most notably the West Kettle River. Below Midway, the river loops south into the United States, through Ferry County, Washington, before flowing north back into Canada, passing by Grand Forks, British Columbia where the Granby River joins. After flowing east for about 10 miles (16 km), the river turns south, entering the United States again. It then flows south, joining the Columbia River near Kettle Falls, Washington. The Columbia River at this point is a large reservoir impounded behind Grand Coulee Dam, called Lake Roosevelt. The Kettle enters the lake at the Columbia’s river mile 706.[2]

[edit] Natural history

The Kettle River once supported salmon and other anadromous fish. The construction of Grand Coulee Dam, along with Chief Joseph Dam, blocked fish migration up the Columbia and its upper tributaries, including the Kettle River. In addition, Grand Coulee Dam’s reservoir, FDR Lake, flooded traditional fishery sites, including Kettle Falls near the mouth of the Kettle River

Okanogan River - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

Okanogan River - US List

The Okanogan River (called the Okanagan River in Canada) is a tributary of the Columbia River, approximately 115 mi (185 km) long, in southern British Columbia in Canada and north central Washington in the United States. It drains a scenic plateau region called the Okanagan Country east of the Cascade Range and north and west of the Columbia, and also the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia - which is also known as the Okanagan Country, but more usually as “the Okanagan”.
Contents

The Okanogan River rises in southern British Columbia (where it is known as the Okanagan River), issuing out of the southern end of Okanagan Lake, which is on the north side of the city of Penticton, British Columbia. It flows south past Penticton, through Skaha Lake, past Okanagan Falls, through Vaseux Lake, and past Oliver to Osoyoos and Osoyoos Lake, which spans the international border and has its outlet into the Okanogan River at Oroville, on the south end of the lake, in Okanogan County. At the border the river’s name (and the region and also the name of the Okanagan Highland) changes spelling from Okanagan to Okanogan. Average annual flow of the river at this point is 643 cfs.[8]

From Oroville the Okanogan River flows south through the Okanogan County, past Okanogan and Omak. It forms the western boundary of the Colville Indian Reservation. The Okanogan River enters the Columbia River from the north, 5 miles (8 km) east of Brewster, between the Wells Dam (downstream) and the Chief Joseph Dam (upstream). The reservoir behind Wells Dam, into which the Okanagan empties, is called Lake Pateros.

[edit] Tributaries

The Okanogan River receives the Similkameen River from the west near Oroville. It receives Omak Creek from the east near Omak, Tonasket Creek from the east near Oroville and Bonaparte Creek at Tonasket which flows from Bonaparte Lake near Wauconda and also from Aeneas Valley west of the San Poil. It occasionally receives water from Salmon Creek at the town of Okanogan but much of the year this water is diverted for irrigation.

Columbia River - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

Columbia River - US List

The Columbia River (known as Wimahl or Big River to the Chinook-speaking natives who live on its lowermost reaches)[8] is the largest river in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. It is named after the Columbia Rediviva, the first ship from the western world known to have traveled up the river. It stretches from the Canadian province of British Columbia (BC) through the U.S. state of Washington, forming much of the border between Washington and Oregon before emptying into the Pacific Ocean. The river is 1,243 miles (2,000 km) long, and its drainage basin is 258,000 square miles (670,000 km2).

Measured by the volume of its flow, the Columbia is the largest river flowing into the Pacific from North America and is the fourth-largest river in the U.S. The river’s heavy flow, and its large elevation drop over a relatively short distance, give it tremendous potential for the generation of electricity. It is the largest hydroelectric power producing river in North America with fourteen hydroelectric dams in the U.S. and Canada, and many more on various tributaries.

The Columbia and its tributaries are home to numerous anadromous fish, which migrate between fresh water streams and the Pacific Ocean. These fish—especially the various species of salmon—have been a vital part of the river’s ecology and the local economy for thousands of years.

The development of the river for human use, and the industrial waste that resulted in some cases, have come into conflict with ecological conservation numerous times since Americans and Europeans began to settle the area in the 18th century. The taming, or harnessing—two terms commonly used in the early 20th century to describe the development of the rivers of the American west—included dredging for navigation by larger ships, nuclear power generation and nuclear weapons research and production, and the construction of dams for power generation, irrigation, navigation, and flood control.

Alsek River - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

Alsek River - US List

It starts at the confluence of the Dezadeash and Kaskawulsh rivers in Kluane National Park and Reserve. After flowing south into the northwestern tip of British Columbia, it is joined by the Tatshenshini River in Tatshenshini-Alsek Park. It reaches the Pacific Ocean at Dry Bay, in the Gulf of Alaska, south of Yakutat, Alaska close to the northern end of the Alaska Panhandle. Although the river is navigable by kayak or rubber raft in its northern reaches, it rapidly becomes unnavigable—for any but the most experienced and skilled kayakers—at Turnback Canyon.

On older maps, the Alsek river is labeled as the Tatshenshini and vice versa. Some Yukon First Nation elders also refer to the river as the Tatshenshini.

The river flows next to the Lowell glacier which blocked off the river from 1725 to 1850 and created a large lake behind it. When the glacier broke in 1850, it created a massive flood, washing away everything in its path on the way to the Pacific.

The river carries a lot of silt from the Alsek lake/glacier, which contributes to the rivers low temperature.

The Alsek and nearby East Alsek rivers were at one time connected, and the old river bed can still be made out on some maps.

The Alsek glacier contacts the Grand Plateau glacier, which faces the shoreline. Also in the same general area are the Doame foothills and Doame river.

[edit] History

The first known kayak descent of Turnback Canyon was by Dr. Walt Blackadar, who ran the canyon solo on August 25, 1971. He wrote about his trip for Sports Illustrated. “This has been a day!,” he wrote in his journal. “I want any other kayaker or would-be expert to read my words well. The Alsek Gorge is unpaddleable!” Despite this sincere warning from a man who apparently felt lucky to be alive, groups of expert kayakers have successfully run Turnback Canyon since then. A prominent mountain which overlooks the Alsek was named Mount Blackadar in his honor.

The portion of the river inside Kluane National Park has been designated a Canadian Heritage River.

In 1958, a magnitude 7.7 earthquake centered near Lituya bay significantly changed the lay of the land.[1] The earthquake caused the Doame river and East Alsek river to join together.

[edit] Fishing

The Alsek and East Alsek rivers are a part of the Yakutat area limited entry set gillnet fishery. Both rivers produce King, Silver, and Sockeye commercially. Chum and Pink salmon can also be caught, but are not generally sought after due to their relative lack of worth/quality. These two rivers can be characterized as low volume fisheries, while the Alsek river in particular produces particularly high quality salmon due to its low temperature. The Alsek’s silt content also prevents the sun from damaging the fish.

The area also supports subsistence and sport fishing. There are multiple local sport fishing, sight-seeing, hunting, and animal watching lodges

North American Rivers - US List

October 13th, 2008 by admin

US List - North American Rivers

Below is a US List of the largest rivers in North America. You can find details on each in the subcategories.

* Alsek - Canada/United States
* Columbia - Canada/United States
o Okanagan - Canada/United States
o Kettle - Canada
o Pend Oreille - United States
o Kootenay - Canada/United States
o Canoe - Canada
o Kicking Horse - Canada
* Dean - Canada
* Fraser - Canada
o Pitt - Canada
o Thompson - Canada
o Chilcotin - Canada
o Quesnel - Canada
o Nechako - Canada
* Liard - Canada
* Mississippi - United States
* Nass - Canada
* Peace - Canada
* Saskatchewan - Canada
* Skagit - Canada/United States
* Skeena - Canada
o Babine - Canada
o Bulkley - Canada
o Morice - Canada
o Kitwanga - Canada
o Zymoetz - Canada
* Squamish - Canada
* St. Lawrence - Canada
* Yukon - Canada/United States


192.168.1.1Linksys Router SetupLinksys Default Password
192.168.1.1
192.168.1.1
201-102-1111