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Wakulla River

River in Florida, United States of America


River in Florida, United States of America

FieldValue
nameWakulla River
imageWakullaRiver.jpg
image_size288px
image_captionWakulla River between the Upper and Lower Bridges.
mapStmarksrivermap.png
map_size288px
map_captionSt. Marks River watershed
pushpin_map_size288px
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1United States
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Florida
subdivision_type3County
subdivision_name3Wakulla
subdivision_type4District
subdivision_name4NWFWMD
length11 mi
source1Wakulla Springs
source1_locationWakulla Springs State Park
source1_coordinates
mouthSt. Marks River
mouth_locationSt. Marks, Florida
mouth_coordinates

The Wakulla River is an 11 mi river in Wakulla County, Florida. It carries the outflow from Wakulla Springs, site of the Edward Ball Wakulla Springs State Park, to the St. Marks River 3 mi north of the Gulf of Mexico. Its drainage basin extends northwest into Leon County, including Munson Slough, and may extend as far north as the Georgia border.

The river, due to its clear, clean water, was once used to film underwater scenes during north Florida's cinema boom. Movies filmed in Wakulla Springs and river include several Tarzan movies, starring Johnny Weissmuller, and Creature from the Black Lagoon.

Etymology

The name Wakulla is from Guacara. Guacara is a Spanish phonetic spelling of an original Indian name, and Wakulla is a Muskhogean pronunciation of Guacara. The Spanish Gua is the equivalent of the Creek wa, and as the Creek alphabet does not exhibit an "R" sound, the second element cara would have been pronounced kala by the Creeks. The Creek voiceless "L" is always substituted for the Spanish "R". Thus the word Guacara was pronounced Wakala by the Seminoles who are Muskhogean in their origin and language. In the 17th century the Spanish also used the name "Guacara River" for what is now called the Suwannee River. Boyd et al. suggest that the common name of the two rivers is related to the fact that both are the products of solution topography, and that both are fed by springs.

Since Wakulla was probably a Timucuan word, it is unlikely that its meaning will ever be known. It may contain the word kala which signified a "spring of water" in some Indian dialects, but not in the Timucuan language. Timucuan cala meant "to cut or shave", "to freeze to death", or "fruit".

List of crossings

CrossingCarriesImageLocationCoordinatesHeadwatersWakulla SpringsMouth
[[Image:Wakulla County Road 61 FL.svg20px]] CR 61
Wakulla Springs Road[[File:CR61 bridge over Wakulla River.jpg150px]]Wakulla Springs
Wakulla Park Drive[[File:Wakulla Park Drive crossing of the Wakulla River.jpg150px]]Wakulla Springs
Upper Bridge[[Image:Wakulla County Road 365 FL.svg20px]] CR 365
Shadeville Highway[[File:Wakulla River Upper Bridge westbound.jpg150px]]Wakulla Station
Lower Bridge[[Image:US 98.svg20px]] US 98
Coastal Highway[[File:US 98 Wakulla River bridge.jpg150px]]St. Marks

Notes

References

  • Boyd, Mark F., Hale G. Smith and John W. Griffin. (1999). Here they once stood: the tragic end of the Apalachee missions. University Press of Florida
  • Granberry, Julian. (1993). A Grammar and Dictionary of the Timucua Language. Third Edition. The University of Alabama Press.
  • Marth, Del and Marty Marth, eds. 1990. The Rivers of Florida. Sarasota, Florida: Pineapple Press, Inc. . P. 96.
  • Milanich, Jerald T. (2006). Laboring in the Fields of the Lord: Spanish Missions and Southeastern Indians. University Press of Florida.
  • Wenhold, Lucy L. Translator and Ed. (1936). "A 17th Century Letter of Gabriel Diaz Vara Calderón, Bishop of Cuba, Describing the Indians and Indian Missions of Florida." Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 95, No. 16. Reprinted in David Hurst Thomas. Ed. (1991). Spanish Borderlands Sourcebooks 23 The Missions of Spanish Florida. Garland Publishing.

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. [http://viewer.nationalmap.gov/viewer/ The National Map], accessed April 18, 2011
  2. Boning, Charles R. 2007. ''Florida's Rivers''. Sarasota, Florida: Pineapple Press, Inc. {{ISBN. 978-1-56164-400-1
  3. [http://www.wakullacounty.org/wakulla-30.htm Wakulla County: Wakulla Springs] Retrieved June 28, 2007
  4. Milanich, pp. 12-13. ''Guacara'' is possibly a Spanish spelling of Timucuan ''bacara'', "to ripen".
    Wenhold, p. 8.
    Boyd:101
    Granberry:118, 131
  5. Simpson, J. Clarence. (1956). "Florida Place-Names of Indian Derivation". Florida Geological Survey.
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