Mud River (West Virginia)
The Mud River is a tributary of the Guyandotte River in southwestern West Virginia in the United States. Via the Guyandotte and Ohio Rivers, it is part of the Mississippi River watershed. The river is popular with muskellunge anglers.
The Mud River was so named on account of the muddy character of its water.[1][2]
Course
The Mud River rises in Boone County, west of Madison, and flows generally northwestward for 72 mi (116 km) through Lincoln and Cabell counties, past the towns of Hamlin and Milton. It meets the Guyandotte at the town of Barboursville. Near the stream's mouth, the Mud River meanders through the large, ancient valley of the Teays River.
gollark: You can't.
gollark: Hmm. So it looks like if I *do* accept the cryoapiocity and do database lookups when rendering (with some sort of batching mechanism, of course) then I can get some other nice things, like working aliases and non-awful case-insensitivity handling.
gollark: Although extra network round trips are bee.
gollark: That *might* not be a *terrible* way to do it.
gollark: It could, yes.
See also
References
- Moyer, Armond; Moyer, Winifred (1958). The origins of unusual place-names. Keystone Pub. Associates. p. 87.
- Survey, West Virginia Geological and Economic; Teets, D. Dee; Latimer, W. J. (1913). County reports and maps: Cabell, Wayne and Lincoln counties. Wheeling News Litho. Co. p. 29.
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