Kings River (Arkansas)

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Kings River
Kings River Falls 002.jpg
Kings River Falls within the Kings River Natural Area, Madison County, Arkansas
Location
Country United States
State Arkansas and Missouri
Physical characteristics
Source 
  location Madison County, Arkansas
  coordinates 35°50′00″N93°34′50″W / 35.83333°N 93.58056°W / 35.83333; -93.58056 [1]
  elevation2,270 [2]  ft (690 m)
Mouth  
  location
Table Rock Lake, Carroll County, Arkansas
  coordinates
36°29′29″N93°34′40″W / 36.49139°N 93.57778°W / 36.49139; -93.57778
(confluence with Table Rock Lake waters in northern Carroll County, Arkansas) [3]
  elevation
915 ft (279 m)
Discharge 
  location Berryville, Arkansas
  average583 c/ft. per sec. [4]

The Kings River is a tributary of the White River. It rises in the Boston Mountains of Arkansas and flows northward for more than 90 miles into Table Rock Lake in Missouri. The Arkansas portion of the river is undammed and bordered by rural and forested land, the river is popular for paddling and sport fishing.

Contents

Course

The highest sources of the Kings River are at an elevation of more than 2,000 feet (610 m) on the north slope of the Boston Mountains in the Ozark National Forest. The stream headwaters arise on the north flank of a ridge about 1.5 miles east of Boston at an elevation of about 2270 feet. [2] The stream flows generally north through the Kings River Falls Natural Area. It passes under Arkansas Highway 74 and past Kingston and flows roughly parallel to Arkansas Highway 21 then turns northwest to pass U.S. Route 412 just east of Marble. It continues to the northwest becoming a portion of the Madison - Carroll county line east of Rockhouse. It enters Carroll County and meanders north passing under U. S. Route 62 west of Berryville. It passes under Arkansas Highway 143 south of Grandview and enters Table Rock Lake and the Missouri line at the Stone-Barry county line southwest of Carr Lane on Missouri Route 86. [5]

The river follows a meandering course with the confluence with the White River being almost due north of the source with a drainage basin of 591 square miles (1,530 km2), before emptying into Table Rock Lake, a reservoir on the White River at an elevation of 915 feet (279 m). [6] The Missouri portion of the river and its confluence with the White River is flooded as part of Table Rock Lake. [7] [8]

The town of Berryville is the only incorporated city within the watershed. Near Berryville, the average annual mean flow of the Kings River from 1935 to 2008 was 572 cubic feet of water per second. [9]

Tributaries of the Kings River include Felkins Creek, Maxwell Creek, Pine Creek, Dry Fork Creek and Osage Creek. [5]

History

The Kings River area was a hunting territory of the Osage Indian tribe during early historic times. A man named Henry King from Alabama was part of an expedition to the Boston Mountains to search for land to settle on. He died and was buried on the banks of the river which was supposedly given his name. Other families from Alabama soon settled the area. However an article titled "A Description of the Arkansas Territory" published in the February 4, 1823, issue of The Arkansas Gazette, refers to the Kings River (and also mentions the White River, Buffalo River and War Eagle River). About 1940 the poultry industry began to replace subsistence farming as the main source of employment for the sparse population of the region. In 1951 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed a dam on the Kings River, but the dam was never constructed, making the Kings River one of the few undammed rivers in the Ozark region. [10]

Conservation and recreation

The Kings River has been designated by the state of Arkansas as an "Extraordinary Resource Waterbody." This designation imposes restrictions on streambed alterations and development and pollution in the river basin. The state of Arkansas describes the river: "High in the Boston Mountains of Madison County lie the beginnings of the Kings River. From this steep country the stream twists its way northward to the White River....In its upper reaches, the Kings cuts a narrow gorge through sandstone, shale and limestone. On downstream, the countryside is not quite so precipitous, but the water is the same -- clear and cool." [11]

The King's River Natural Area, established in 1979, is located on the upper Kings River east of the hamlet of Boston. The Natural Area includes 1,059 acres (429 ha) and features a two mile hiking trail which leads to Kings River Falls, a scenic 6-feet (2 mt) high waterfall. The Natural Area is located in a rugged mountain area. A mixed pine-hardwood forests cloaks the east slopes of the preserve; the steeper western slopes are covered with hardwood forest. [12] The uppermost tributaries of the Kings River are in the Ozark National Forest.

The McIlroy Madison County Wildlife Management Area comprises 14,496 acres (5,866 ha) including several miles along the Kings. In 2010, the Nature Conservancy established a 4,561 acres (1,846 ha) preserve which includes seven miles of frontage on the Kings River, a short distance downstream (north) of the Wildlife Management Area. [13]

Recreational paddlers divide the Kings River into two sections. An upper section of eleven miles, from Dripping Springs to the Arkansas State Route 74 crossing of the river, is a turbulent class III whitewater stream, including the waterfall at the Kings River Natural Area. The water level of the river in this section is usually sufficient for floating in winter and spring until about July 1. Water quality is excellent. The lower Kings River comprises 82.5 river miles from State Highway 74 to Missouri State Highway 86. It is a relatively gentle Class I stream that usually contains enough water to be floated in winter, spring, and early summer until August or after rains at any time. [14] The Kings River has good sport fishing for smallmouth bass and other species.

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The Ozarks, also known as the Ozark Mountains, Ozark Highlands or Ozark Plateau, is a physiographic region in the U.S. states of Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma and the extreme southeastern corner of Kansas. The Ozarks cover a significant portion of northern Arkansas and most of the southern half of Missouri, extending from Interstate 40 in central Arkansas to Interstate 70 in central Missouri.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Boston Mountains</span> Highland ecoregion in Arkansas and Oklahoma, United States

The Boston Mountains is a Level III ecoregion designated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the U.S. states of Arkansas and Oklahoma. Part of the Ozarks, the Boston Mountains are a deeply dissected plateau. The ecoregion is steeper than the adjacent Springfield Plateau to the north, and bordered on the south by the Arkansas Valley. The Oklahoma portion of the range is locally referred to as the Cookson Hills. There are several theories of how the mountains were named, though apparently none are related to the Massachusetts city.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Buffalo National River</span> River

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Long Creek is a stream in western Boone and eastern Carroll counties of Northwest Arkansas. The stream is a tributary of the Table Rock Lake section of White River.

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References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Kings River (Arkansas)
  2. 1 2 Boston, Arkansas, 7.5 Minute Topographic Quadrangle, USGS, 1973
  3. Grandview, Ark - Mo, 7.5 Minute Topographic Quadrangle, USGS, 1975
  4. USGS Water data
  5. 1 2 Arkansas Atlas & Gazetteer, DeLorme, 2nd ed., 2004, pp. 23 and 31 ISBN   0-89933-345-1
  6. "Watershed Management Pla" Kings River Watershed Partnership. http://www.kingsriverwatershed.org/default_images/publications/watershed_plan/KRWP_plan_part_1.pdf Archived 2014-08-26 at the Wayback Machine , accessed 19 Jun 2013
  7. Arkansas Atlas & Gazetteer, DeLorme, 2004, 2nd edition, p. 23, ISBN   0-89933-345-1
  8. Shell Knob, Missouri, 15 Minute Topographic Quadrangle, USGS, 1927 (Revised 1950)
  9. "Water Data Report -- 2008" http://wdr.water.usgs.gov/wy2008/pdfs/07050500.2008.pdf, accessed 19 June 2013
  10. "Kings River" The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=6310, accessed 19 Jun 2013
  11. "The Kings River: Priceless" http://www.rexnelsonsouthernfried.com/?p=2209
  12. "Kings River Falls Natural Area" Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission. http://www.naturalheritage.com/natural-area/kings-river-falls/, accessed 20 Jun 2013
  13. "Kings River Preserve in Arkansas: The Nature Conservancy. http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/regions/northamerica/unitedstates/arkansas/newsroom/kings-river-preserve-in-arkansas.xml, accessed 19 Jun 2013
  14. "Kings River" Southwest Paddler http://southwestpaddler.com/docs/kings.html, accessed 19 Jun 2013