Friday, August 14, 2009

Delaware River Basin

The material is copied from the following New Jersey State website on the Delaware River Basin.

http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/map2.htm

The green drawing of the entire basin (at top of right side of this blog) is also copied from this site.

The mainstem Delaware River, the longest un-dammed river east of the Mississippi, extends 330 miles from the confluence of its East and West branches near Hancock, New York, to the mouth of the Delaware Bay.

Approximately five percent of the nation's population relies on the basin's waters for drinking and industrial use, and the bay is only a gas tank away for about 23 percent of the people living in the United States. Yet, the watershed drains only 0.4 percent of the continental U.S. land area.

In all, the basin comprises 13,539 square miles, including portions of Delaware, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.

1 comment:

  1. I find rivers interesting. I grew up in Washington County of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is believe there are three rivers there but there is truly four, the Allegheny, Monongahela, Ohio and the Wisconsin Glacial Flow (which is underground).

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