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Henrys Fork (Snake River tributary)


FieldValue
nameHenrys Fork
imageHenry's Fork River from Last Chance, Island Park, Idaho.jpg
image_captionHenry's Fork from Last Chance, Idaho
image_size300
mapIP Place Names.jpg
map_size300
map_captionHenrys Fork upper drainage
pushpin_mapUSA Idaho
pushpin_map_size300
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the mouth of Henrys Fork in Idaho
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1United States
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Idaho
subdivision_type4Counties
subdivision_name4Fremont County, Idaho, Madison County, Idaho
length127 mi
discharge1_locationnear Rexburg
discharge1_min183 cuft/s
discharge1_avg2096 cuft/s
discharge1_max79000 cuft/s
source1_locationnear Island Park, Fremont County, Idaho
source1_coordinates
source1_elevation6397 ft
mouthSnake River
mouth_locationsouthwest of Rexburg, Madison County, Idaho
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation4800 ft
basin_size3212 sqmi

Henrys Fork is a tributary river of the Snake River, approximately 127 mi long,{{cite web |url-status = dead

The river is named for Andrew Henry, who first entered the Snake River plateau in 1810. Employed by the Missouri Fur Company, he built Fort Henry on the upper Snake River, near modern St. Anthony, but abandoned this first American fur post west of the continental divide the following spring.{{cite book|last=Shallat|first=Todd A.|author2=Bentley, E. B.|title=Snake: The Plain and Its People|publisher=Boise State University|year=1994|location=Boise, ID|page=125

thumb|Henrys Fork of the Snake River near Coffee Pot Rapids thumb|Kayaking the Coffee Pot Rapids of the Henrys Fork

Sources

The river's source is at Big Springs and the Henrys Lake outlet (10 miles northwest of Big Springs). To the east is Targhee Pass, with Raynolds Pass to the northwest and Red Rock Pass to the southwest. The headwaters of the Henrys Fork are within 10 mi of the headwaters of the Missouri River (on the Red Rock River and Madison River), located across the continental divide in Montana. Henry's Fork drains the northeastern corner of the Snake River Plain, along the continental divide.

River ecology

The Henrys Lake outlet is subject to substantial draw-downs from irrigation diversions during the summer. Late in the season, as the draw-downs decrease with the cooler weather, more water is released into the stream, allowing fish to move up from the lower section of the river. The Nature Conservancy sponsors a learning station near the outlet stream.

South of the lake at Big Springs, nearly 500000 gal of constant 52 F water flow into the river each day. The river flows south through a high plateau in northern Fremont County, through the Caribou-Targhee National Forest, and passes through Island Park Reservoir. It emerges from the reservoir and flows through a canyon that opens up into a broad, flat meadow in the Island Park Caldera in central Fremont County. The river flows slowly past the town of Island Park, through the Harriman State Park, otherwise known as the "Railroad Ranch", and then descends swiftly as it approaches the wall of the caldera, flowing over both Upper Mesa and Lower Mesa Falls, and emerges from the mountains onto the Snake River Plain near Ashton. It flows southwest across the plain, past St. Anthony, and splits into multiple channels into a broad inland delta north of Rexburg. It receives the Teton River from the east approximately 5 mi west of Rexburg. It joins the Snake from the northeast approximately 10 mi southwest of Rexburg, just below 4800 ft.

Island Park Reservoir, a component of the Minidoka Project, is used for irrigation in the Snake River Plain. Its drainage provides one of the most important rainbow trout fisheries in Idaho regarding habitat, fish populations, and use by anglers. The section of the river between Henry's Lake and Big Springs is a major spawning area for trout and is closed to fishing.

Henrys Fork has long been noted for its superb fishing, especially its dry fly fishing. Bing Lempke, a pipefitter from nearby Idaho Falls, was considered the local dean of the fishery until he died in 1990. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121025115201/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,949710,00.html?promoid=google |url-status=dead |archive-date=October 25, 2012

References

References

  1. "Henrys Fork".
  2. Source elevation derived from [[Google Earth]] search using GNIS source coordinates.
  3. "Upper Snake, Headwaters, Closed Basin Subbasins Plan Plan". Northwest Power and Conservation Council.
  4. "Gage 13056500".
  5. Rees, John E.. (1918). "Idaho Chronology, Nomenclature, Bibliography". W.B. Conkey Company.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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