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Ouachita River

The Ouachita River (/ˈwɑːʃɪtɑː/ WAH-shi-tah) is a 605-mile-long (974 km)[2] river that runs south and east through the U.S. states of Arkansas and Louisiana, joining the Tensas River to form the Black River near Jonesville, Louisiana. It is the 25th-longest river in the United States (by main stem).

Ouachita River
Ouachita River in Ouachita County, Arkansas
Map of the Ouachita River watershed. The Ouachita joins the Tensas River near Jonesville, Louisiana to form the Black River (Louisiana).
Location
CountryUnited States
StateArkansas, Louisiana
CitiesHot Springs, Arkansas, Camden, Arkansas, Monroe, Louisiana, West Monroe, Louisiana
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationOuachita Mountains, Polk County, Arkansas
 • coordinates34°41′56″N 94°19′57″W / 34.69889°N 94.33250°W / 34.69889; -94.33250
MouthBlack River
 • location
Catahoula Parish, near Jonesville, Louisiana
 • coordinates
31°37′53″N 91°48′25″W / 31.63139°N 91.80694°W / 31.63139; -91.80694Coordinates: 31°37′53″N 91°48′25″W / 31.63139°N 91.80694°W / 31.63139; -91.80694
Length605 mi (974 km)
Discharge 
 • locationWest Monroe, LA (includes Boeuf River)
 • average24,262 cu/ft. per sec.[1]
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftLittle Missouri, Saline, Tensas
 • rightCaddo, Little
Blakely Mountain Dam on the Ouachita River in Garland County, Arkansas. The dam impounds Lake Ouachita.
Columbia Lock and Dam on the Ouachita River

Course

The Ouachita River begins in the Ouachita Mountains near Mena, Arkansas. It flows east into Lake Ouachita, a reservoir created by Blakely Mountain Dam. The North Fork and South Fork of the Ouachita flow into Lake Ouachita to join the main stream. Portions of the river in this region flow through the Ouachita National Forest. From the lake, the Ouachita flows south into Lake Hamilton, a reservoir created by Carpenter Dam, named after Flavius Josephus Carpenter. The city of Hot Springs lies on the north side of Lake Hamilton. Another reservoir, Lake Catherine, impounds the Ouachita just below Lake Hamilton. Below Lake Catherine, the river flows free through most of the rest of Arkansas.

Just below Lake Catherine, the river bends south near Malvern, and collects the Caddo River near Arkadelphia. Downstream, the Little Missouri River joins the Ouachita. After passing the city of Camden, shortly downstream from where dredging for navigational purposes begins, the river collects the waters of Smackover Creek and later the Ouachita's main tributary, the Saline River. South of the Saline, the Ouachita flows into Lake Jack Lee, a reservoir created by the Ouachita and Black River Project, just north of the Louisiana state line. The Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge encompasses the Ouachita from the Saline River to Lake Jack Lee's mouth.

Below Lake Jack Lee, the Ouachita continues south into Louisiana. The river flows generally south through the state, collecting the tributary waters of Bayou Bartholomew, Bayou de Loutre, Bayou d'Arbonne, the Boeuf River, and the Tensas River.

The Ouachita has five locks and dams along its length, located at Camden, Calion, and Felsenthal, Arkansas, and in Columbia and Jonesville, Louisiana.

 
Ouachita River Navigation Project by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Black River

The river below the junction with the Tensas at 31°16′22″N 91°50′01″W / 31.27278°N 91.83361°W / 31.27278; -91.83361 is called the Black River and flows for 41.6 miles (66.9 km)[3] in Catahoula and Concordia parishes until it joins the Red River, which flows into both the Atchafalaya River and the Mississippi River, via the Old River Control Structure.

History

The river is named for the Ouachita tribe, one of several historic tribes who lived along it. Others included the Caddo, Osage Nation, Tensa, Chickasaw, and Choctaw. The historian Muriel Hazel Wright suggested that word Ouachita owa chito is a Choctaw phrase meaning "hunt big" or "good hunting grounds".[4][5]

Before the rise of the historic tribes, their indigenous ancestors lived along the river for thousands of years. In the Lower Mississippi Valley, they began building monumental earthwork mounds in the Middle Archaic period (6000–2000 BC in Louisiana).[6] The earliest construction was Watson Brake, an 11-mound complex built about 3500 BC by hunter gatherers in present-day Louisiana. The discovery and dating of several such early sites in northern Louisiana has changed the traditional model, which associated mound building with sedentary, agricultural societies, but these cultures did not develop for thousands of years.

The largest such prehistoric mound was destroyed in the 20th century during construction of a bridge at Jonesville, Louisiana. Likely built by the Mississippian culture, which rose about 1000 AD on the Mississippi and its tributaries, this mound was reported in use as late as 1540 by the Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto. On his expedition through this area, he encountered Indians occupying the site. A lightning strike destroyed the temple on the mound that year, which was seen as a bad omen by the tribe. They never rebuilt the temple, and were recorded as abandoning the site in 1736.

Land speculators

During the late 1700s, when the area was controlled by the Spanish and French, the river served as a route for early colonists, and for land speculators such as the self-styled Baron de Bastrop.[7] The "Bastrop lands" later passed into the hands of another speculator, former Vice President Aaron Burr. He saw potential for big profits in the event of a war with Spain following the Louisiana Purchase. Burr and many of his associates were arrested for treason, before their band of armed settlers reached the Ouachita.

During the 1830s, the Ouachita River Valley attracted land speculators from New York and southeastern cities. Its rich soil and accessibility due to the country's elaborate river steamboat network made it desirable.

One of the investors from the east was Meriwether Lewis Randolph, the youngest grandson of Thomas Jefferson. He was building a home on the Ouachita River in what is now Clark County, Arkansas, when he died of malaria in 1837. He had been appointed Secretary of the Arkansas Territory by President Andrew Jackson in 1835, and had relinquished his commission when Arkansas became a state in 1836.

Steamboats, 1819 to 1890

Steamboats operated on the Red River to Shreveport, Louisiana.

In April 1815, Captain Henry Miller Shreve was the first person to bring a steamboat, the Enterprise, up the Red River.[citation needed]

During the 1830s, farmers cultivated land for large cotton plantations; dependent on slave labor, cotton production supported new planter wealth in the ante-bellum years. Steamboats ran scheduled trips between Camden, Arkansas and New Orleans. A person could travel from any eastern city to the Ouachita River without touching land, except to transfer from one steamboat to another.[8]

In the late 1830s, the steamboats in rivers on the west side of the Mississippi River were a long, wide, shallow draft vessel, lightly built with an engine on the deck. These newer steamboats could sail in just 20 inches of water. Contemporaries claimed that they could "run with a lot of heavy dew".[9]

In 1881 a snagboat was employed on the river and a boat for dredging in the shoals to the amount of $141,879.24.[10] Earlier plans had called for the construction of locks and dams.

Navigation

A 337-mile-long "Ouachita-Black Rivers Navigation Project" began in 1902, to create a navigable waterway from Camden, Arkansas to Jonesville, Louisiana, and when completed in 1924 included six locks and dams that were 84 feet wide and 600 feet in length, having from 3 to 5 tainter gates. Including the Black River the total navigable length is 351 miles.[11] The Ouachita-Black Rivers Navigation Project has less than a million tons of shipping annually which has the likely prospect of the future withdrawal of federal support. The project's system of dams and locks enhances the river's recreational use and regional water supply.[12]

Floods

Flood of 1882

The Ouachita River reached a historic flood stage crest with a river gauge reading at Camden, Arkansas of 46 feet on May 12, 1882.[13]

Flood of 1927

In Monroe, Louisiana during a flood on May 4, 1927 the high water mark on river gage reading was 48.6 feet.[14]

 
Flood of 1927 in Arkansas.

Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 flooded the areas along the Ouachita Rivers along with many other rivers.

Flood of 1932

In February 1932, the Ouachita River rose 1.5 feet higher than the May 4, 1927 flood. The annual high water mark on river gage readings were 48.6 in 1927 and 49.7 in 1932.[14]

Flood of 1968

The Ouachita River reached flood stage crest with a river gauge reading at Camden, Arkansas of 43.08 feet on May 17, 1968.[13]

Flood of 2018

The Ouachita River reached flood stage crest at 85.43 feet above sea level, about 20 feet above the normal water level of 65 feet at the Felsenthal lock and dam on March 11, 2018.[15] The highest water level ever recorded at Felsenthal was 88.3 feet in 1945.[16]

Natural history

 
A floating camp on the Ouachita River in Louisiana

The river continues to be utilized for commercial navigation on a smaller scale than during its "steamboat" days.[17] It is fed by numerous small creeks containing endemic native fish such as killifish. Fishing remains popular in the river for black bass, white bass, bream, freshwater drum, and gar. Concerns about airborne mercury contamination in some areas discourage consumption of the fish for food. Fishing for rainbow trout is popular in the tailwaters of Lakes Ouachita, Hamilton and Catherine in and around Hot Springs, Arkansas.

The river is commercially navigable from Camden, Arkansas, to its terminal point in Jonesville in Catahoula Parish in eastern Louisiana. Upstream of Camden, the river receives substantial recreational use.

The Ouachita is lined for most of its length with deep woods, including substantial wetlands. It has a scenic quality representative of the southwestern Arkansas and northern Louisiana region.

Lists

Major towns along the river are:

See also

References

  1. ^ "USGS Surface Water data for Louisiana: USGS Surface-Water Annual Statistics".
  2. ^ Howard Perlman, USGS (2012-10-31). "Lengths of major rivers, from USGS Water-Science School". Ga.water.usgs.gov. from the original on 2009-03-05. Retrieved 2012-11-21.
  3. ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map 2016-06-30 at the Wayback Machine, accessed June 3, 2011
  4. ^ Sandy Nestor (29 November 2004). Indian Placenames in America. McFarland. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7864-7167-6.
  5. ^ Deborah Bouziden (1 May 2015). Oklahoma Off the Beaten Path®: A Guide to Unique Places. Globe Pequot Press. pp. 61–. ISBN 978-1-4930-1849-9.
  6. ^ Cathy Corder. "Louisiana History". Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities. from the original on 2018-04-20. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
  7. ^ Chamberlain, Charles; Faber, Lo. "Spanish Colonial Louisiana". Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities. from the original on February 19, 2018. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  8. ^ Brown, Mattie (1942). "River Transportation in Arkansas, 1819-1890". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 1 (4): 342–354. doi:10.2307/40037518. JSTOR 40037518.
  9. ^ https://www.encyclopedia.com/history/united-states-and-canada/us-history/steamboats Encyclopedia | United States History | Steamboats
  10. ^ Benyaurd, W. H. H. (1882). Annual report upon the preservation of the ports of Memphis, Vicksburg, and Natchez : improvement of the navigation of Red River, Louisiana and of certain rivers in Mississippi, Arkansas, and Tennessee; and water-gauges on the Mississippi and its principal tributaries, in charge of W. H. H. Benyaurd, being appendix P of the annual report of the Chief of Engineers for 1882.. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office., p. x.
  11. ^ Ouachita-Black River navigation 2017-03-08 at the Wayback Machine- Retrieved 2017-03-05
  12. ^ Bolden, Bonnie. (May 28, 2018). "What if the Ouachita River dried up?" The News Star. (Monroe, LA). News Star website Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  13. ^ a b McIntyre, Janice (31 December 2015). "Rising water levels expected to continue for the next few days". El Dorado News Times. Historic crests include 46 feet on May 12, 1882; 44.82 feet on April 3, 1945; 43.87 feet on May 5, 1958 and 43.08 feet on May 17, 1968.
  14. ^ a b Aiello, Thomas (2007). "The Ouachita River Flood in Monroe, Louisiana, 1932". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 48 (1): 25–54. JSTOR 4234242.
  15. ^ https://nwis.waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?cb_00060=on&cb_00065=on&format=html&site_no=07364078&period=&begin_date=2018-03-07&end_date=2018-03-18 U.S. Department of the Interior | U.S. Geological Survey(U.S.G.S.) USGS 07364078 Ouachita River at Felsenthal L&D (lower)
  16. ^ https://www.eldoradonews.com/news/2018/mar/07/flooding-continues-felsenthal/ El Dorado News-Times | March 7, 2018 | Flooding continues in Felsenthal.
  17. ^ "Ouachita River Steamboats". Ouachita River Foundation. from the original on June 25, 2003. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  • William Least Heat-Moon, Roads to Quoz, An American Mosey (2008), ISBN 978-0-316-11025-9. Section I – "Down an Ancient Valley" describes a trip down the Ouachita River valley.

External links

  • Ouachita River Foundation

ouachita, river, this, article, about, river, arkansas, louisiana, river, texas, oklahoma, washita, river, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, materia. This article is about the river in Arkansas and Louisiana For the river in Texas and Oklahoma see Washita River This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ouachita River news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Ouachita River ˈ w ɑː ʃ ɪ t ɑː WAH shi tah is a 605 mile long 974 km 2 river that runs south and east through the U S states of Arkansas and Louisiana joining the Tensas River to form the Black River near Jonesville Louisiana It is the 25th longest river in the United States by main stem Ouachita RiverOuachita River in Ouachita County ArkansasMap of the Ouachita River watershed The Ouachita joins the Tensas River near Jonesville Louisiana to form the Black River Louisiana LocationCountryUnited StatesStateArkansas LouisianaCitiesHot Springs Arkansas Camden Arkansas Monroe Louisiana West Monroe LouisianaPhysical characteristicsSource locationOuachita Mountains Polk County Arkansas coordinates34 41 56 N 94 19 57 W 34 69889 N 94 33250 W 34 69889 94 33250MouthBlack River locationCatahoula Parish near Jonesville Louisiana coordinates31 37 53 N 91 48 25 W 31 63139 N 91 80694 W 31 63139 91 80694 Coordinates 31 37 53 N 91 48 25 W 31 63139 N 91 80694 W 31 63139 91 80694Length605 mi 974 km Discharge locationWest Monroe LA includes Boeuf River average24 262 cu ft per sec 1 Basin featuresTributaries leftLittle Missouri Saline Tensas rightCaddo LittleBlakely Mountain Dam on the Ouachita River in Garland County Arkansas The dam impounds Lake Ouachita Columbia Lock and Dam on the Ouachita River Contents 1 Course 1 1 Black River 2 History 2 1 Land speculators 2 2 Steamboats 1819 to 1890 2 3 Navigation 2 3 1 Floods 2 3 1 1 Flood of 1882 2 3 1 2 Flood of 1927 2 3 1 3 Flood of 1932 2 3 1 4 Flood of 1968 2 3 1 5 Flood of 2018 3 Natural history 4 Lists 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksCourse EditThe Ouachita River begins in the Ouachita Mountains near Mena Arkansas It flows east into Lake Ouachita a reservoir created by Blakely Mountain Dam The North Fork and South Fork of the Ouachita flow into Lake Ouachita to join the main stream Portions of the river in this region flow through the Ouachita National Forest From the lake the Ouachita flows south into Lake Hamilton a reservoir created by Carpenter Dam named after Flavius Josephus Carpenter The city of Hot Springs lies on the north side of Lake Hamilton Another reservoir Lake Catherine impounds the Ouachita just below Lake Hamilton Below Lake Catherine the river flows free through most of the rest of Arkansas Just below Lake Catherine the river bends south near Malvern and collects the Caddo River near Arkadelphia Downstream the Little Missouri River joins the Ouachita After passing the city of Camden shortly downstream from where dredging for navigational purposes begins the river collects the waters of Smackover Creek and later the Ouachita s main tributary the Saline River South of the Saline the Ouachita flows into Lake Jack Lee a reservoir created by the Ouachita and Black River Project just north of the Louisiana state line The Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge encompasses the Ouachita from the Saline River to Lake Jack Lee s mouth Below Lake Jack Lee the Ouachita continues south into Louisiana The river flows generally south through the state collecting the tributary waters of Bayou Bartholomew Bayou de Loutre Bayou d Arbonne the Boeuf River and the Tensas River The Ouachita has five locks and dams along its length located at Camden Calion and Felsenthal Arkansas and in Columbia and Jonesville Louisiana Ouachita River Navigation Project by the U S Army Corps of Engineers Black River Edit The river below the junction with the Tensas at 31 16 22 N 91 50 01 W 31 27278 N 91 83361 W 31 27278 91 83361 is called the Black River and flows for 41 6 miles 66 9 km 3 in Catahoula and Concordia parishes until it joins the Red River which flows into both the Atchafalaya River and the Mississippi River via the Old River Control Structure History EditThe river is named for the Ouachita tribe one of several historic tribes who lived along it Others included the Caddo Osage Nation Tensa Chickasaw and Choctaw The historian Muriel Hazel Wright suggested that word Ouachita owa chito is a Choctaw phrase meaning hunt big or good hunting grounds 4 5 Before the rise of the historic tribes their indigenous ancestors lived along the river for thousands of years In the Lower Mississippi Valley they began building monumental earthwork mounds in the Middle Archaic period 6000 2000 BC in Louisiana 6 The earliest construction was Watson Brake an 11 mound complex built about 3500 BC by hunter gatherers in present day Louisiana The discovery and dating of several such early sites in northern Louisiana has changed the traditional model which associated mound building with sedentary agricultural societies but these cultures did not develop for thousands of years The largest such prehistoric mound was destroyed in the 20th century during construction of a bridge at Jonesville Louisiana Likely built by the Mississippian culture which rose about 1000 AD on the Mississippi and its tributaries this mound was reported in use as late as 1540 by the Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto On his expedition through this area he encountered Indians occupying the site A lightning strike destroyed the temple on the mound that year which was seen as a bad omen by the tribe They never rebuilt the temple and were recorded as abandoning the site in 1736 Land speculators Edit During the late 1700s when the area was controlled by the Spanish and French the river served as a route for early colonists and for land speculators such as the self styled Baron de Bastrop 7 The Bastrop lands later passed into the hands of another speculator former Vice President Aaron Burr He saw potential for big profits in the event of a war with Spain following the Louisiana Purchase Burr and many of his associates were arrested for treason before their band of armed settlers reached the Ouachita During the 1830s the Ouachita River Valley attracted land speculators from New York and southeastern cities Its rich soil and accessibility due to the country s elaborate river steamboat network made it desirable One of the investors from the east was Meriwether Lewis Randolph the youngest grandson of Thomas Jefferson He was building a home on the Ouachita River in what is now Clark County Arkansas when he died of malaria in 1837 He had been appointed Secretary of the Arkansas Territory by President Andrew Jackson in 1835 and had relinquished his commission when Arkansas became a state in 1836 Steamboats 1819 to 1890 Edit Steamboats operated on the Red River to Shreveport Louisiana In April 1815 Captain Henry Miller Shreve was the first person to bring a steamboat the Enterprise up the Red River citation needed During the 1830s farmers cultivated land for large cotton plantations dependent on slave labor cotton production supported new planter wealth in the ante bellum years Steamboats ran scheduled trips between Camden Arkansas and New Orleans A person could travel from any eastern city to the Ouachita River without touching land except to transfer from one steamboat to another 8 In the late 1830s the steamboats in rivers on the west side of the Mississippi River were a long wide shallow draft vessel lightly built with an engine on the deck These newer steamboats could sail in just 20 inches of water Contemporaries claimed that they could run with a lot of heavy dew 9 In 1881 a snagboat was employed on the river and a boat for dredging in the shoals to the amount of 141 879 24 10 Earlier plans had called for the construction of locks and dams Navigation Edit A 337 mile long Ouachita Black Rivers Navigation Project began in 1902 to create a navigable waterway from Camden Arkansas to Jonesville Louisiana and when completed in 1924 included six locks and dams that were 84 feet wide and 600 feet in length having from 3 to 5 tainter gates Including the Black River the total navigable length is 351 miles 11 The Ouachita Black Rivers Navigation Project has less than a million tons of shipping annually which has the likely prospect of the future withdrawal of federal support The project s system of dams and locks enhances the river s recreational use and regional water supply 12 Floods Edit Flood of 1882 Edit The Ouachita River reached a historic flood stage crest with a river gauge reading at Camden Arkansas of 46 feet on May 12 1882 13 Flood of 1927 Edit In Monroe Louisiana during a flood on May 4 1927 the high water mark on river gage reading was 48 6 feet 14 Flood of 1927 in Arkansas Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 flooded the areas along the Ouachita Rivers along with many other rivers Flood of 1932 Edit In February 1932 the Ouachita River rose 1 5 feet higher than the May 4 1927 flood The annual high water mark on river gage readings were 48 6 in 1927 and 49 7 in 1932 14 Flood of 1968 Edit The Ouachita River reached flood stage crest with a river gauge reading at Camden Arkansas of 43 08 feet on May 17 1968 13 Flood of 2018 Edit The Ouachita River reached flood stage crest at 85 43 feet above sea level about 20 feet above the normal water level of 65 feet at the Felsenthal lock and dam on March 11 2018 15 The highest water level ever recorded at Felsenthal was 88 3 feet in 1945 16 Natural history Edit A floating camp on the Ouachita River in Louisiana The river continues to be utilized for commercial navigation on a smaller scale than during its steamboat days 17 It is fed by numerous small creeks containing endemic native fish such as killifish Fishing remains popular in the river for black bass white bass bream freshwater drum and gar Concerns about airborne mercury contamination in some areas discourage consumption of the fish for food Fishing for rainbow trout is popular in the tailwaters of Lakes Ouachita Hamilton and Catherine in and around Hot Springs Arkansas The river is commercially navigable from Camden Arkansas to its terminal point in Jonesville in Catahoula Parish in eastern Louisiana Upstream of Camden the river receives substantial recreational use The Ouachita is lined for most of its length with deep woods including substantial wetlands It has a scenic quality representative of the southwestern Arkansas and northern Louisiana region Lists EditMajor towns along the river are Hot Springs Arkansas Malvern Arkansas Arkadelphia Arkansas Camden Arkansas Sterlington Louisiana Monroe Louisiana West Monroe Louisiana Columbia Louisiana Harrisonburg Louisiana Jonesville LouisianaSee also EditList of Arkansas rivers List of Louisiana rivers List of longest rivers of the United States by main stem References Edit USGS Surface Water data for Louisiana USGS Surface Water Annual Statistics Howard Perlman USGS 2012 10 31 Lengths of major rivers from USGS Water Science School Ga water usgs gov Archived from the original on 2009 03 05 Retrieved 2012 11 21 U S Geological Survey National Hydrography Dataset high resolution flowline data The National Map Archived 2016 06 30 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 3 2011 Sandy Nestor 29 November 2004 Indian Placenames in America McFarland p 1 ISBN 978 0 7864 7167 6 Deborah Bouziden 1 May 2015 Oklahoma Off the Beaten Path A Guide to Unique Places Globe Pequot Press pp 61 ISBN 978 1 4930 1849 9 Cathy Corder Louisiana History Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities Archived from the original on 2018 04 20 Retrieved 2018 04 19 Chamberlain Charles Faber Lo Spanish Colonial Louisiana Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities Archived from the original on February 19 2018 Retrieved April 19 2018 Brown Mattie 1942 River Transportation in Arkansas 1819 1890 The Arkansas Historical Quarterly 1 4 342 354 doi 10 2307 40037518 JSTOR 40037518 https www encyclopedia com history united states and canada us history steamboats Encyclopedia United States History Steamboats Benyaurd W H H 1882 Annual report upon the preservation of the ports of Memphis Vicksburg and Natchez improvement of the navigation of Red River Louisiana and of certain rivers in Mississippi Arkansas and Tennessee and water gauges on the Mississippi and its principal tributaries in charge of W H H Benyaurd being appendix P of the annual report of the Chief of Engineers for 1882 Washington D C Government Printing Office p x Ouachita Black River navigation Archived 2017 03 08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2017 03 05 Bolden Bonnie May 28 2018 What if the Ouachita River dried up The News Star Monroe LA News Star website Retrieved 28 August 2018 a b McIntyre Janice 31 December 2015 Rising water levels expected to continue for the next few days El Dorado News Times Historic crests include 46 feet on May 12 1882 44 82 feet on April 3 1945 43 87 feet on May 5 1958 and 43 08 feet on May 17 1968 a b Aiello Thomas 2007 The Ouachita River Flood in Monroe Louisiana 1932 Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 48 1 25 54 JSTOR 4234242 https nwis waterdata usgs gov nwis uv cb 00060 on amp cb 00065 on amp format html amp site no 07364078 amp period amp begin date 2018 03 07 amp end date 2018 03 18 U S Department of the Interior U S Geological Survey U S G S USGS 07364078 Ouachita River at Felsenthal L amp D lower https www eldoradonews com news 2018 mar 07 flooding continues felsenthal El Dorado News Times March 7 2018 Flooding continues in Felsenthal Ouachita River Steamboats Ouachita River Foundation Archived from the original on June 25 2003 Retrieved April 19 2018 William Least Heat Moon Roads to Quoz An American Mosey 2008 ISBN 978 0 316 11025 9 Section I Down an Ancient Valley describes a trip down the Ouachita River valley External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ouachita River Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Washita Upper Ouachita River Lower Ouachita River Ouachita River Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ouachita River amp oldid 1149560162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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