Macoupin Creek

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Macoupin_Creek an entity of type: Thing

Macoupin Creek is a 99.7-mile-long (160.5 km) tributary of the Illinois River, which it joins near the village of Hardin, Illinois. The word macoupin refers to the yellow pond lily (Nuphar advena), a native plant of the regional wetlands, and a favorite food source of local Indians. It has a large rootstock (a tuber) that was baked in a fire pit. The spelling is derived from French attempts at documenting the pronunciation of the Miami-Illinois macopina, with macoupin being the modern form of the earlier French macopine. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Macoupin Creek
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Macoupin Creek
rdf:langString Macoupin Creek
xsd:float 39.41088485717773
xsd:float -89.58009338378906
xsd:integer 4755716
xsd:integer 1093258646
rdf:langString Montgomery County west of Morrisonville
rdf:langString Illinois#USA
rdf:langString Location of the mouth within Illinois
xsd:string 39.4108846 -89.5800944
rdf:langString Macoupin Creek is a 99.7-mile-long (160.5 km) tributary of the Illinois River, which it joins near the village of Hardin, Illinois. The word macoupin refers to the yellow pond lily (Nuphar advena), a native plant of the regional wetlands, and a favorite food source of local Indians. It has a large rootstock (a tuber) that was baked in a fire pit. The spelling is derived from French attempts at documenting the pronunciation of the Miami-Illinois macopina, with macoupin being the modern form of the earlier French macopine. Macoupin Creek has been channelized near its junction with the Illinois River. A straight channel cuts through old oxbows on a direct path to the river. The old channel meanders through the Illinois bottoms for about 5 miles (8 km) before joining the river, near the village of Hardin. The two channels thus form an island, called Macoupin Island, across the Illinois River from Hardin. The old channel of Macoupin Creek forms the northwestern boundary between Greene and Jersey Counties. The actual boundary is ambiguous because of the shifting creek. The creek is about 100 miles (160 km) in length. The lower 23 miles (37 km) of the creek runs in a narrow valley, usually less than a mile wide, between steep bluffs that rise up to 180 feet (55 m) high. The bottom of the valley is mainly flat, and has little or no gradient in the downstream direction. The modern channel runs in a straight line, with little evidence of old oxbows. This portion of Macoupin Creek therefore appears to be a drainage ditch that was dug through a swamp or a marsh, that had no well-defined natural channel. This matches with old accounts that this area was a wetland, with natural lakes, and vast amounts of growing macoupin.
rdf:langString GNIS ID
xsd:integer 568
rdf:langString Confluence with the Illinois River near Hardin
xsd:double 128.016
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5947
xsd:double 160451.5968
<Geometry> POINT(-89.580093383789 39.410884857178)

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