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Malad River (Gooding County, Idaho)

River in Gooding County, Idaho in the United States


Summary

River in Gooding County, Idaho in the United States

FieldValue
nameMalad River
name_otherBig Wood River, Riviera Malades, Sickly River
imageSnake River watershed map.png
image_captionMap of the Snake River watershed including the Malad River
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1United States
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Idaho
subdivision_type3Region
subdivision_name3Gooding County
length_mi12.0
length_ref
discharge1_locationnear Hagerman
discharge1_min0 cuft/s
discharge1_avg286 cuft/s
discharge1_max6400 cuft/s
discharge2_locationmouth
discharge2_avg112 cuft/s
source1Confluence of the Big Wood River & Little Wood River
source1_coordinates
source1_elevation3460 ft
mouthSnake River
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation2703 ft
basin_size_mi23000
basin_size_ref
tributaries_leftLittle Wood River
tributaries_rightBig Wood River

The Malad River is a river located within Gooding County, and Oneida County, Idaho, United States, and is a tributary of the Snake River.

Description

The river is formed by the confluence of the Big Wood River and the Little Wood River near Gooding. From there the river flows south and west for 12.0 mi to join the Snake River near Hagerman.

The river flows through Thousand Springs State Park, where it tumbles down a stairstep waterfall. The Malad Gorge is 250 ft deep and 2.5 mi long.

The river's flow is affected by numerous reservoirs and irrigation works on its tributaries. The Malad River itself is largely diverted into a power flume that enters the Snake below the mouth of the Malad, via a powerhouse. Below the diversion the Malad River is replenished by numerous springs, yet the average flow above the diversion is higher than at the river's mouth.

The Malad River is part of the Columbia River basin, being a tributary of the Snake River, which is a tributary to the Columbia River.

The name of the river stems from French malade, via Rivière aux Malades ('river of the sick'), presumably as a reference to some illness suffered by early French-Canadian trappers who investigated the area.

Notes

References

References

  1. {{Gnis. 376083. Malad River
  2. [[Google Earth]] elevation for [[Geographic Names Information System. GNIS]] coordinates.
  3. [https://pubs.usgs.gov/wdr/2005/wdr-id-05-1/ Water Resource Data, Idaho, 2005] {{Webarchive. link. (2013-06-08 , USGS.)
  4. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. [http://viewer.nationalmap.gov/viewer/ The National Map] {{webarchive. link. (2012-03-29 , accessed 3 May 2011)
  5. "Kelton Road Malad River crossing and stage station by jeichho".
  6. George R. Stewart. (1970). "A Concise Dictionary of American Place-Names". New York, Oxford University Press.
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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