Adsactly Education - Missouri River

in education •  6 years ago 

Adsactly Education: Missouri River



The Missouri River is the longest in North America running 2,341 miles (3,767 km) from it’s headwaters in Yellowstone park to it’s confluence with the Mississippi. The drainage basin for the Missouri is a significant fraction of the center of the US and Canada.

The Missouri is known as ‘the Big Muddy’ and it’s very character carries risks of catastrophic flooding and a lack of flow depending on he season. Of all the great rivers of the west it is probably most at peril due to global warming.


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The River and It’s Course

Due to the way the Missouri was originally mapped, there is no definite headwaters. It officially begins at the confluence of three rivers, the Jefferson, the Gallitin and the Madison. The Madison begins just a few miles from the headwaters of the Snake in Madison Lake in Yellowstone National Park as the Firehole which flows east to the confluence.

The Gallatin runs out of Gallatin Lake in Yellowstone while the Jefferson rises up in the Rocky Mountains of Montana and joins the Beavrhead before the confluence of the three. By the time it is actually called the Missouri (at Missouri Headwaters State Park in Montana) it is already a pretty good sized river.


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From the confluence the river flows northeast to Great Falls, Montana. It then flows generally east across the plains of Montana to North Dakota where the Yellowstone joins it from the southwest. The Missouri flows generally east through much of North Dakota before it turns southeast to run through South Dakota and into Nebraska. It forms the boundary between Nebraska and Iowa then between Kansas and Missouri. The river then flows east through Kansas City and on to St. Louis where it joins the Mississippi at the Missouri and Illinois border.

The Missouri drains an enormous watershed that totals over 500,000 sq. miles (1,300,000 sq. km) which is over five percent of the continent of North America. Though the population of the drainage area is only about 12,000,000 it provides a significant fraction of the grain, meat and fowl that feeds North America.

The flow rate for the Missouri is prodigious with an average of 87,500 Cubic Feet Per Second that can swell to 750,000 CFS during flooding. At it’s confluence with the Mississippi the Missouri provides roughly 45% of the flow to the combined rivers.


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Geology

Around 50 million years ago the Rocky Mountains rose to form the western edge of a vast sea that covered the entire area between the Arctic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico. The sediment from that sea forms much of the basis for the land that the Missouri drains. An uplift caused the sea to retreat and the area between the Rocky Mountains and the Appalachian Mountains became the home to many rivers and watercourses.

As the Rocky Mountains wore down a gentle tilt from west to east cast the character of the Great Plains. The Missouri drainage was probably split into three segments. The northern drained into Hudson’s Bay, the center and southern flowed toward what is now the Mississippi.

The ice ages changed the character of the river and the basin that we see today. As the ice ground down from the north the area was filled with huge inland lakes which spilled over making many of the dry watercourses that we see today. The end of the last ice age (roughly 15,000 years ago) marked the course of the current rivers.


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As the river and it’s tributaries flowed through the sediment that created the surface of the Great Plains it carried vast amounts of silt as it cut new channels through the plains and eventually carried all the way to the Gulf of Mexico and the Delta of the Mississippi.

History

Almost as soon as the ice left (15,000 years ago) the people appeared. The silt that was carried downstream made huge flats of very rich soil that included a wide diversity of (edible) plants and American Bison by the millions. It is here, in the drainage of the Missouri and the Mississippi that North American agriculture began. Indigenous people soon learned to cultivate squash and corn and communities arose on a scale unseen in the rest of North America. A vast growing and trading network existed on the banks of the rivers.

Buffalo were numerous and provided the natives not only food but the hides provided clothing and even temporary shelter. Prior to the introduction of the horse, Buffalo hunting was a very cooperative process which generally involved herding a group of the foul tempered beasts into an enclosure or off a cliff. It was hard and dangerous but the rewards were mountains of good meat and leather. It required the work of many to get and store this resource which gave rise to the system of families, clans and tribes. Working together allowed all to eat and prosper.


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Herbs and vegetables were numerous in the area so the diet was varied and rich. A rich diet and cooperative living led to a large population rise. More people and more time that was not needed just to be able to eat led to advanced tool making and art both practical and esthetic. Items of beauty were highly regarded and heavily traded. Tools and implements were prized possessions and the techniques for making them spread rapidly.

The natives had little written record so most of the information that we have today is from archeological findings and the records of the earliest European contacts. In the second part of this project we will explore the European expansion through the drainage of the Missouri River as well as the shape and form of the river today and how it got that way.

While the words and ideas in this post are strictly those of the author this source was referred to by me to insure numerical and historical accuracy.
Wikipedia: Missouri River

Unsourced Photos are used courtesy of the author.

Authored by: @bigtom13

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Love that photo of the Indians in ceremonial dress. Any idea what year that was taken?

1928 in Dresden, Germany. I think one of my favorite authors is in that photo, but I can't prove it.

Thanks for the question. Always a pleasure.

Excellent photography

It's an amazing river and about the risks of catastrophic flooding the solution: Recognize the levies interfered with nature and even more so now with man made climate change and let the natural flow of river regain the natural growing of trees for food and other crops along the sides of the river. This saves lives, increases the great natural way of nourishing the land, and keeps the ocean clean. Of course curtailing the burning of so much fossil fuels and leaving most in the ground is the added safeguard to respect nature.

Oh, man. I hope nobody else reads your comment. That is a huge part of the second half of this piece.

Actually, very astute observation. We seem to continue to learn that the road to hell is indeed paved with good intentions. Thanks for reading and contributing.

Of all the great rivers of the west it is probably most at peril due to global warming.

😞! Comparing Missouri River with Mississippi River I can tell it’s a huge difference. As you mentioned “it’s a pretty good sized river.” Before reading your article, I didn’t know it was the longes river in North America, but now I do. I wonder how long it stays that way. It’s really interesting to read about the history and how the Missouri River has formed. At the end, this enormous river has been providing life to many for millions years. We should thought about and really appreciate what we still have until we don’t.

If the US were settled by whites from the west instead of the east it would be 4th longest in the world. What we know as the Yellowstone would actually be the headwaters and the Mississippi would flow into the Missouri rather than the other way round.

The Missouri is the absolute life of the great plains. I crossed it 8 or 10 times this summer, and it is really obvious being on the ground.

Thanks for the great comment.

The world the beauty of the world belong to Mighty god no one have certificat for the land no one take the land for their grave. we're all travelers. white people build the tall building & tenology, the beauty of the world made by Mighty god. Eygept onece in incient time phrown people lived there, now all is control by Arab people the king the president is Arabs. Missouri Riveris in Eygept land every generation come & dies but the world will be for ever & it was before our father Adam & our mother Eve no one brought license from Mighty god we dont live here for fantasy life we live for very short time wake up smell the beautiful rosses.

These stories were really unknown to me! I heard it first time. Thanks for shared this blog!
IMG_20180731_193348_272.JPG

It really is a big river that drains a huge basin. The size of it all is just staggering.

This river name is The Missouri River is the longest waterway in North america. ascending inside the Rocky Mountains of western Montana, the Missouri streams east and south for two,341 miles three,767 kmb getting into the Mississippi River north of St. Louis, Missouri. The stream takes seepage from a with some restraint populated, semi-parched watershed of more than 1/2 a million rectangular miles (1,300,000 km2), which incorporates parts of ten U.S. states and Canadian areas. while blended with the lower Mississippi River, it administration the field's fourth longest waterway gadget. For more than 12,000 years, individuals have relied upon the Missouri River and its tributaries as a supply of sustenance and transportation. more prominent than ten most imperative organizations of nearby people populated the watershed, greatest principle a traveling way of life and relying upon noteworthy buffalo crowds that after wandered by means of the mind boggling Plains. the essential Europeans experienced the waterway in the late seventeenth century, and the area surpassed by means of Spanish and French arms sooner than at some point or another winding up some portion of the usa by means of the Louisiana buy. The Missouri turn out to be for quite some time accepted to be a piece of the Northwest Passage – a water course from the Atlantic to the Pacific – however when Lewis and Clark have turned into the first to venture to every part of the waterway's whole length, they affirmed the legendary pathway to be no more prominent than a legend...@adsactly

We here in the US tend to forget what a big deal 'the Northwest Passage' was in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. It seems so ludicrous now knowing that the Rocky Mountains stand in the way, but at the time the Rockies were completely unknown to the Europeans.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

River is clearly the superior waterway. It's wider, deeper and did you notice how the Ohio's scour channel extends through the confluence point downstream? Don't think the Misorio will change names below Cairo any time soon, however. Anyway state of Misorio would have to become Ohio and that one is already taken...

Ahahaha. Yeah, Ohio got first pick. The rivers that run in from the east run over a lot more rock (rather than sediment) and tend to have deeper channels. Even without the man made impediments the Missouri can be awful wide and fairly shallow in places.

What a massive river is it has very interesting history pretty impressive information thanks for sharing @adsactly

Glad you liked it, it was a pleasure to write.

Wow! That looked absolutely amazing. I can’t even imagine how awesome that had to be. Absolutely breathtaking.

I rode my motorcycle across the entire drainage and back this summer. It is even more impressive when you are on the ground with it.

good joop

Thank you I have read your post, my knowledge is big and keep telling about such interesting things.

The scale of this river blows my mind - I can't relate, maybe the Volga when I traveled through Russia is what comes closes to the scale of the Missouri River - But I'd have to visit the US to compare ;-)

Thanks for sharing with us a piece of history and context - curious to see the follow-up post :-)

The Volga also drains an enormous semi arid basin. I've never seen it, but I would expect that they would be very similar. Very interesting comparison. I will probably have to do a little research now just to satisfy my curiosity.

Thanks for stopping by. Always appreciated.

What a good content! Amazing photography too!

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The way you explained everything is appreciated. I appreciate your hard work. The river looks lack of water in it and there is no flow of water.
If you wish please visit my blog here @coolguy222 may be you like something, if you like something then i deserve an upvote From you

Thank you. That picture is at Great Falls Montana, fairly early in the river's course. I included that one to show the rock base after the water has run over it. I'm not sure why the river was stopped, but there is generally water going over the falls.

Picture of Indians looks amazing, their dresses shows their culture and values. Can you please tell me this tribal can steel live in .

The photo lists them as Dakota Sioux. I suspect that means they are from several of the various Sioux tribes that exist to this day.

thank u for information.

@adsactly-witness Very good post. Missouri river banks are gold place for Civil war artifacts, hope I am right

Yes. Several battles were fought in the Missouri drainage, though much more was just downstream on the Mississippi.

I had no idea that the Missouri River was the largest in North America. There is always so much talk about the Mississippi. The images of the river are very picturesque. It is a shame that so many of our great waterways are at risk. Freshwater is so important and so many things depend on access to it. I am so happy that you included the section about the buffalo hunt and how the river has played an important role in the lives of the native peoples in this area for so long. That is some history that is so important to share.

Wow excellent post, very instructive especially for those who do not know the history. The rivers were the main sources of food and shelter for man, and I loved knowing part of the history of this majestic and great Missouri River. In my country Venezuela, we have the Orinoco River, which is the largest and one of the most important in South America, possessing a rich fauna among which are the anacondas and large caimans. Thank you once again, I am a faithful believer that every day you learn something new and today I had to learn and know about the Missouri River and I thank you for it.

I've never seen the Orinoco but I have certainly read a considerable amount about it. A very impressive river indeed.

Wow very wonderful photography and very grateful post . I like it. thank you so much my dear friend.

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In fact, due to the rising global warming, all major rivers in the West need to take a step to eliminate fear.Great post. Thank you for sharing the insight.

Yes. The Missouri is subject to both extreme low flow and extreme high flows as a result of global warming. It is certainly one of the most vulnerable of the great rivers of the world.

This is the really beautiful colorchallenge photography..I like this photography...
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I did not take any of these pictures. All came from Wickimedia Commons or Pixabay.

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The Missouri River is the longest river in North america. rising inside the Rocky Mountains of western Montana, the Missouri flows east and south for two,341 miles (three,767 km) before getting into the Mississippi River north of St. Louis, Missouri. The river takes drainage from a in moderation populated, semi-arid watershed of more than 1/2 a million rectangular miles (1,300,000 km2), which includes components of ten U.S. states and Canadian provinces. whilst mixed with the lower Mississippi River, it bureaucracy the arena's fourth longest river device.

For over 12,000 years, people have depended on the Missouri River and its tributaries as a supply of sustenance and transportation. greater than ten most important companies of local individuals populated the watershed, maximum main a nomadic life-style and depending on significant bison herds that after roamed via the incredible Plains. the primary Europeans encountered the river in the late 17th century, and the region exceeded via Spanish and French arms earlier than sooner or later becoming part of the usa via the Louisiana purchase. The Missouri become long believed to be a part of the Northwest Passage – a water route from the Atlantic to the Pacific – but when Lewis and Clark have become the first to travel the river's entire length, they confirmed the mythical pathway to be no greater than a legend.

Missouri and Mississippi rivers make one of the finest river system of the world. The delta of these rivers is not only important from the point of view of its delta, ecology, geographical history but also important from the perspective of history.
This ancient river system is an array of natural habitats and many resources which benefits entire America.
It was a very nice and knowledgeable post. Kudos to the writer @bigtom13

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

The most beautifully written piece about a river that I have read on Steemit. It was like reading a biography of person from its childhood to the present.

The style of writing is to my exact taste and preference. Which basically means that a lot of historically and geologically oriented information was assimilated into this post. I was a little surprised to know that only 12 million people live in the watershed of this great river. The reason is that the river is practically in the heart (center) of the North American Continent.

This area is very big but obviously most of the population of North America lives along the Eastern and Western seaboards, so maybe this makes sense.

PS: The pictures are amazing!

Thank you for the very kind words. I'm pretty passionate about rivers in general.

River is always the humans favourite as it provide both food and water. Now dumping system is also getting dependent on river.

Missouri is a truly majestic and beautiful river. If you look at the map, it is a large water artery from which many branches are formed. History shows that the river gave an opportunity to create large fertile territories for indigenous peoples of the time. In addition, the river - was the backbone of the trade network that provided the peoples with the necessary things and created a trading network. Thanks to the river, agriculture flourished, and this, in turn, accelerated the rate of population growth.
I liked your next article about rivers. Thank you

GREAT POST. @adsactly, at adsactly education this time you exposed the Missouri River after the Colorado River and Columbia River. The author is able to develop his work well and able to add insight for readers. As we already know that human civilization emerges in areas close to water. To find water then since ancient times humans chose to live by the river. Until now we have encountered people who develop river well will be able to grow the economy and able to sustain life. If we see people living in the river basin do not want to keep the river then the impact is clear, Garbage piled up in the river and will harvest it sat rainy season. Floods and diseases come. In fact, since the time of our ancestors the river was treated well and not greedy because it knows that the river has given blessings to people like.

  1. Alluvial soil is fertile. River mud is a sediment of weathering rocks and organic substances that have a soft texture and rich in nutrients. We can easily find at the mouth of the river. alluvial soils that accumulate over time can form a new land of delta with a high degree of fertility
  2. Food sources. Already since prehistoric times in human times have not known farming they can collect fish, shrimp crab shrimp and other protein sources. In the course of the river flow is also always overgrown by various edible plants.
  3. As a means of transportation. Although only by the canoe of bamboo or even banana tree can be a tool to transport goods and people. Especially now technological advances will be able to grow better.
    however, we also realize there are major challenges to managing the river such as silting. pollution, destruction of forests in the upper reaches of the river that can cause disasters. If we are not wise to respond it can also threaten the sunagi survival.

thank you @bigtom13
thank you @adsactly
thank you steemit

warm regard from indonesia

Nice information @adsactly sir, with nice pictures. And i also believe that knowladge is power. Information is liberating. Education is the premise of progress, in every society, in every family.

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Copy and paste gets a flag.

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Copy paste gets a flag.

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Copy paste theft gets a flag. Everytime.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)Reveal Comment

Copy and paste gets a flag.