Butternut Creek (Unadilla River tributary)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Butternut_Creek_(Unadilla_River_tributary) an entity of type: Thing

Butternut Creek is a 37-mile-long (60 km) river in the state of New York. It converges with the Unadilla River just downstream of Mount Upton. The creek has many fish for fishing dominated by largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, wall-eye, chain pickerel, rock bass, and yellow perch. The Mohawk called the creek the Tienuderrah. General Jacob Morris visited the area in 1787, and described Butternut Creek as "the handsomest navigable creek I ever lay my eyes upon." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Butternut Creek (Unadilla River tributary)
rdf:langString Butternut Creek
rdf:langString Butternut Creek
xsd:float 42.41527938842773
xsd:float -75.375
xsd:integer 53793378
xsd:integer 1071490699
rdf:langString Stony Creek, Cahoon Creek, Shaw Brook
rdf:langString Calhoun Creek, Morris Brook, Thorp Brook, Coye Brook, Dunderberg Creek, Halbert Brook, Dry Brook
rdf:langString Looking downstream from Bell Hill Road by Garrattsville
rdf:langString New York Adirondack Park#USA
rdf:langString Location of the mouth of Butternut Creek
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Country
rdf:langString State
xsd:string 42.415277777777774 -75.375
rdf:langString Butternut Creek → Unadilla River → Susquehanna River → Chesapeake Bay → Atlantic Ocean
rdf:langString Butternut Creek is a 37-mile-long (60 km) river in the state of New York. It converges with the Unadilla River just downstream of Mount Upton. The creek has many fish for fishing dominated by largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, wall-eye, chain pickerel, rock bass, and yellow perch. The Mohawk called the creek the Tienuderrah. General Jacob Morris visited the area in 1787, and described Butternut Creek as "the handsomest navigable creek I ever lay my eyes upon."
xsd:double 304.8
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6830
xsd:double 59545.728
<Geometry> POINT(-75.375 42.415279388428)

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