Friday, May 8, 2009

Quiz: Longest Rivers and more

Quick, name the longest river in the United States. If you said the Mississippi River, you are close. Acording to the U.S. Geological Survey, the Mississippi is the second longest river (2340 mi), followed by the Yukon (1980 mi), Rio Grande (1900 mi), St. Lawrence (1900 mi), Arkansas (1469 mi), and Colorado (1450 mi). First place, however, belongs to the Missouri River, at 2540 miles in length.

Next, name the three largest man-made lakes in the country. If you got the first two, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, both on the Colorado, I am impressed. If you knew the third, Lake Sakakawea on the Missouri River, I am very impressed. Yesterday Dee and Cal crossed the Missouri River at the upper end of Lake Sakakawea.

Now name the explorers who followed this river into the Pacific Northwest from 1803 to 1806? This question is a bit easier, but I will let you follow the link to confirm their names. On Christmas Eve of 1804 they finished building Fort Manden on the river at what is now the other end of Sakakawea Lake.

Finally, can you name the longest undammed river in the contiguous U.S.? This would be the Yellowstone River, which flows into the Missouri ten or fifteen miles upstream from where Dee and Cal crossed it. The explorers I'm talking about followed both rivers because they appeared to be about the same size.

The river crossing by satellite. Williston is at the top and the lake is to the right.

1 comment:

  1. Donnal, On their way to Canada, Cal & Dee will pass through the tiny hamlet of Fortuna, ND -- which has its own claim to fame. According to Wikipedia "Fortuna, North Dakota has the latest sunset time on the summer solstice (June 23) than any other town in the contiguous, lower 48 States. The sun sets at 10:03 PM Central Daylight Time (CDT)." Two factors account for its uniqueness: (1)its high latitude and (2) its location at the western edge of the Central Time Zone. I would guess it also has fairly late sunrises, too. Best regards, Dean

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