Poso Creek
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Poso_Creek an entity of type: Thing
Poso Creek or Posey Creek is an 87.9-mile (141.5 km) intermittent stream in Kern County, California. The headwaters of Poso Creek are located within the Sierra Nevada and the Sequoia National Forest, at elevations of up to 8,000 feet (2,400 m). The 50-foot (15 m) high Spear Creek Falls (often known as Poso Creek Falls) is located along a tributary of Poso Creek within the national forest. Poso Creek proper begins at the confluence of Spear Creek and Von Hellem Creek on the west slope of the Greenhorn Mountains. The upper reaches of the creek flow south through the Linn Valley past Posey and Glennville, then to Poso Flat, where it receives Cedar Creek and Little Poso Creek from the east. Below the confluence with Little Poso Creek, it turns west, passing through the Mount Poso and Poso Cree
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Poso Creek
rdf:langString
Poso Creek
rdf:langString
Poso Creek
xsd:float
35.80389022827148
xsd:float
-118.6533355712891
xsd:integer
34430529
xsd:integer
1110136087
rdf:langString
Confluence of Spear Creek and Von Hellem Creek on the west slope of the Greenhorn Mountains of the Sierra Nevada, Kern County
rdf:langString
California
rdf:langString
Location of the mouth within California
rdf:langString
Country
rdf:langString
District
rdf:langString
State
xsd:string
35.80388888888889 -118.65333333333334
rdf:langString
Poso Creek or Posey Creek is an 87.9-mile (141.5 km) intermittent stream in Kern County, California. The headwaters of Poso Creek are located within the Sierra Nevada and the Sequoia National Forest, at elevations of up to 8,000 feet (2,400 m). The 50-foot (15 m) high Spear Creek Falls (often known as Poso Creek Falls) is located along a tributary of Poso Creek within the national forest. Poso Creek proper begins at the confluence of Spear Creek and Von Hellem Creek on the west slope of the Greenhorn Mountains. The upper reaches of the creek flow south through the Linn Valley past Posey and Glennville, then to Poso Flat, where it receives Cedar Creek and Little Poso Creek from the east. Below the confluence with Little Poso Creek, it turns west, passing through the Mount Poso and Poso Creek oil fields, which are a likely source of petroleum pollutants during flooding events. Below the oil fields the creek emerges to the intensively farmed San Joaquin Valley, where it passes between Wasco and McFarland. The creek is crossed by Highway 99 and the Southern Pacific Railroad at Famoso and by the Friant-Kern Canal a few miles downstream. Most of the lower creek flows through artificial channels beginning north of Wasco. Its mouth is on the Kern River floodway in Kern National Wildlife Refuge, which connects the normally dry Buena Vista Lake with Tulare Lake. As a primarily rain fed stream, Poso Creek flows only seasonally (November to May) in its upper reaches, while the lower part is an ephemeral wash.The United States Geological Survey operated a stream gage on Poso Creek from 1959 to 1985, recording an average annual flow of 39 cubic feet per second (1.1 m3/s). The greatest flow was 6,700 cubic feet per second (190 m3/s) on February 25, 1969, while the creek was dry for six straight months in 1977.
rdf:langString
Kern River south of Tulare Lake, Kern County
rdf:langString
Posey Creek
xsd:double
67.9704
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
6992
xsd:double
141461.3376
<Geometry>
POINT(-118.65333557129 35.803890228271)