| Nowadaga Creek | |
|---|---|
Nowadaga Creek with tributary waterfall in background | |
| Location | |
| Country | United States |
| State | New York |
| Region | Central New York |
| County | Herkimer |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | |
| • location | North-northeast ofPaines Hollow |
| • coordinates | 42°58′33″N74°53′09″W / 42.9759045°N 74.8857073°W /42.9759045; -74.8857073[1] |
| • elevation | 558 ft (170 m) |
| Mouth | Erie Canal |
• location | Indian Castle |
• coordinates | 43°00′35″N74°46′25″W / 43.0097934°N 74.7734812°W /43.0097934; -74.7734812[1] |
• elevation | 325 ft (99 m)[1] |
| Basin size | 31.4 sq mi (81 km2)[2] |
| Basin features | |
| Progression | Nowadaga Creek → Erie Canal →Mohawk River →Hudson River →Upper New York Bay |
| Tributaries | |
| • right | Ohisa Creek |
Nowadaga Creek is ariver inHerkimer County in the state ofNew York. The basin drains portions of the towns ofDanube,Stark, andLittle Falls, as well as a small portion of the town ofWarren, in southernHerkimer County before converging with theErie Canal inIndian Castle, New York. Thedrainage basin is approximately 49 percent forested. The creek has an average slope of 1.7 percent over its entire stream length of 10.0 miles. On a 1790 land patent map it is spelled "Inchanando Creek".[3]

Nowadaga Creek flows over a bedrock bed for much of its length and, therefore, is not subject to alluvial processes as seen in many similarly sized river basins. Despite its natural and relatively undeveloped setting, for much of its length the creek lacks a well- developed natural floodplain. In many areas along the creek, the bedrock channel is disintegrating, and pieces of stone that originate from the channel bed are conveyed downstream and deposited in lower velocity reaches of the channel, contributing to debris jams, avulsions, and flooding.[4]
This article about a location inHerkimer County, New York is astub. You can help Wikipedia byadding missing information. |