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The Missouri River and its tributaries
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N.P. Dodge Park, Omaha, Nebraska
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The Missouri River is a tributary of the Mississippi River in United States approximately
2,565 mi (4,130 km) long. It is the longest river in the United States and drains approximately one-sixth of the North American continent. The combined Missouri-Mississippi river system is the
fourth longest river in the world. See List of the 10 longest
rivers
Description
The headwaters of the Missouri are in the Rocky Mountains of
southwestern Montana, near the continental divide. The river rises in the Jefferson, Madison, and Gallatin rivers, which converge near Three Forks, Montana to form the Missouri. It flows north, through mountainous canyons, emerging
from the mountains near Great Falls, where a large
cataract historically marked the navigable limit of the river. It flows east across the plains of Montana into North Dakota, then turns southeast, flowing into South Dakota, and along the north
and eastern edge of Nebraska, forming part of its border with South Dakota and
nearly all its boundary with Iowa, flowing past Sioux City and Omaha. It forms the entire
boundary between Nebraska and Missouri, and part of the boundary between Missouri
and Kansas. At Kansas City, it turns generally eastward, flowing across Missouri and joins the Mississippi just
north of St. Louis.
The river is nicknamed "Big Muddy" because of the high silt content in its flow, a feature that is highly visible at its
confluence with the Mississippi. The river was of great importance in the westward expansion of the United States. It was
acquired by the United Stateas as part of the Louisiana
Purchase and explored by the Lewis and Clark
Expedition, which successfully used the river to find a route to the Pacific Ocean. During the late 19th century, the river
was a primary means of transportation of goods and passengers before the spread of the railroads. The extensive use of paddle steamers on the upper river helped facilitate white settlement of the
Dakotas and Montanas, helping spark several of the most intense Indian Wars
in the region. In the 20th century, the upper Missouri was extensively
dammed for flood control, irrigation, and hydroelectric power.
The extensive system of tributaries drain nearly all the semi-arid northern Great Plains of the United States. A very small portion of southern Alberta, Canada is also drained by the river through its tributary, the
Milk.
The river's course roughly follows the edge of the glaciation during the last ice
age. Most of the river's longer tributaries stretch away from this edge, towards the west, draining portions of the eastern
Rockies.
See also: Geography of the
United States
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