Normans Kill

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

The Normans Kill is a 45.4-mile-long (73.1 km) creek in New York's Capital District located in Schenectady and Albany counties. It flows southeasterly from its source in the town of Duanesburg near Delanson to its mouth at the Hudson River in the town of Bethlehem. In the town of Guilderland, the stream is dammed to create the Watervliet Reservoir, a drinking water source for the city of Watervliet and the Town of Guilderland. A one megawatt hydrolectric plant at the dam provides power to pump water to the filtration plant. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Normans Kill
rdf:langString Normans Kill
xsd:integer 29070412
xsd:integer 1108277689
rdf:langString Duanesburg, near Delanson, Schenectady County, New York
rdf:langString Hunger Kill, Krum Kill
rdf:langString Bozen Kill, Vly Creek
rdf:langString Discharge
rdf:langString Basin
rdf:langString Normanskill Creek in Duanesburg
rdf:langString The Normans Kill basin encompasses
rdf:langString parts of three counties.
rdf:langString Darby Hill
xsd:integer 25
rdf:langString Counties
rdf:langString Country
rdf:langString Region
rdf:langString State
rdf:langString Metropolitan area
rdf:langString The Normans Kill is a 45.4-mile-long (73.1 km) creek in New York's Capital District located in Schenectady and Albany counties. It flows southeasterly from its source in the town of Duanesburg near Delanson to its mouth at the Hudson River in the town of Bethlehem. In the town of Guilderland, the stream is dammed to create the Watervliet Reservoir, a drinking water source for the city of Watervliet and the Town of Guilderland. A one megawatt hydrolectric plant at the dam provides power to pump water to the filtration plant. The Normans Kill has a drainage area of over 170 square miles (440 km2), and includes portions of Schoharie County along with the counties in which the Normans Kill itself flows through. The Normans Kill has been used historically as a source of water power during colonial times, during which many mills sprung up along its banks. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, blocks of ice were cut out of the creek for shipment to the city of New York as a form of early refrigeration. Its name is derived from the Dutch word for a Norwegian, who the Dutch called "North Men or Normans", hence North Man's Stream/Creek" the ethnicity of Albert Andriessen Bradt (originally spelled "Bratt"), an early settler who owned sawmills near the first waterfall of the creek in the early 17th century, and the word kill, Dutch for creek. Earlier names of the stream include Godyns Kil, Norman's Kill, Normans Kil, and the indigenous place name Ta-wa-sen-tha, Ta-wal-sou-tha, or Tawalsontha. Locals call and spell it Normanskill (one word) Creek
rdf:langString Normanskill Creek
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8125

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