Nodaway River | |
Map: | Mo rivers2.png |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | US |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | Iowa, Missouri |
Subdivision Type4: | District |
Subdivision Name4: | Page County, Iowa, Holt County, Missouri, Nodaway County, Missouri, Andrew County, Missouri |
Discharge1 Location: | Graham, MO |
Discharge1 Avg: | 1,008 cu/ft. per sec.[1] |
Source1 Location: | Clarinda, Iowa, US |
Source1 Coordinates: | 40.635°N -95.019°W |
Source1 Elevation: | 945feet |
Mouth: | Missouri River |
Mouth Location: | Amazonia, Missouri, US |
Mouth Coordinates: | 39.902°N -94.966°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 827feet |
Tributaries Left: | West Nodaway River |
Tributaries Right: | East Nodaway River |
Extra: | Web site: USGS Geographic Names Information System . 17 September 2009. |
The Nodaway River is a 65.7adj=midNaNadj=mid[2] river in southwest Iowa and northwest Missouri.
The river's name (as "Nodawa") first appears in the journal of Lewis and Clark, who camped at the mouth of the river on July 8, 1804,[3] but who provide no derivation of the name. The name is an Otoe-Missouria term meaning "jump over water".[4] The term would be spelled today in full as Nyi At'ąwe (nyi (water) + a- (on) + t'ąwe (jump)) and would be contracted in regular speech as Nyat'ąwe or Nat'ąwe.[5]
Lewis and Clark camped at the river's mouth on Nodaway Island on July 8, 1804, by Nodaway, Missouri, on the border of Holt County, Missouri and Andrew County, Missouri and took note of the river.
Lewis and Clark liked the spot enough that they recommended it for the winter headquarters of Astor Expedition of 1810–12 that discovered the South Pass in Wyoming through which hundreds of settlers on the Oregon Trail, California Trail, Mormon Trail were to pass.
The river is navigable only by shallow fishing and row boats although steam ships navigated just inside its mouth. The river was the primary route for white settlers including Amos Graham and Isaac Hogan following the Platte Purchase of 1836 which opened northwest Missouri for settlement. Nodaway County, which derives its name from the river, was by far the biggest county in the purchase and the fourth largest in the state of Missouri.
Major tributaries in the Nodaway River basin are Seven Mile Creek, West Nodaway River, East Nodaway River, Middle Nodaway River, Clear Creek, Mill Creek, Elkhorn Creek, and Arapahoe Creek. The biggest town on the river is Clarinda, Iowa.
The Nodaway begins near Shambaugh, Iowa at the confluence of the East and West Nodaway rivers. The West Nodaway River rises northeast of Massena in eastern Cass County, Iowa, and flows [2] south-southwest past Villisca and Clarinda to its junction with the East Nodaway. The East Nodaway River rises just west of Orient in Adair County and flows [2] southwest past Prescott, Corning, Brooks, and Nodaway to its confluence with the West Nodaway. The Middle Nodaway River rises in Adair County south of Casey and flows [2] southwest past Greenfield, Fontanelle, and Carbon to join the West Nodaway just below Villisca, Iowa, [2] above the West Nodaway's juncture with the East Nodaway. The East and West Nodaway join to form the Nodaway River four miles (6 km) north of the Iowa-Missouri border, and the river enters Missouri near Clearmont, Missouri.
Elevations in the Nodaway system range from just under above sea level at the source of the Middle Nodaway, to at the beginning of the main stem, to at its mouth on the Missouri River in Nodaway, Missouri in Andrew County, Missouri.
The Nodaway River is a sixth order river with a basin area of .
The Platte River basin is to the east and the Grand River and Des Moines River basins to the northeast, with the latter defining the boundary between the Missouri River and Mississippi River basins. The west side is bound by the Tarkio River basin and in the northwest by the Nishnabotna River basin.
The Nodaway River basin is prone to extensive flooding and can contribute as much as 20% of the flood crest of the Missouri River near its mouth.
At Graham, Missouri its normal flow is 1,011 cubic feet per second (28.6 m³/s). But during the Great Flood of 1993 the river was flowing 78,300 ft³/s (2220 m³/s) at Graham.