Susquehanna Valley
The Susquehanna Valley is a region of low-lying land that borders the Susquehanna River in the U.S. states of New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. The valley consists of areas that lie along the main branch of the river, which flows from Upstate New York through Pennsylvania and Maryland into the Chesapeake Bay, as well as areas that lie along the shorter West Branch in Pennsylvania.
![](../I/m/Asylum_Township.jpg)
Susquehanna River in Bradford County, Pennsylvania
Communities in the valley
![](../I/m/Susquehanna_River_watershed.png)
The Susquehanna Watershed incorporates all the valley sidewalls within the Susquehanna Valley. It incorporates large areas of the southern tier counties of lower New York State, the majority of central Pennsylvania draining through the Susquehanna Gap through the rich alluvial plain of southcentral Pennsylvania above and past Lancaster and York County into upper Maryland to become the headwaters of the Chesapeake Bay above Aberdeen, Maryland.
Main Branch
Cities
Counties
![](../I/m/Map_of_PA_Susquehanna_Valley.gif)
Counties constituting the Susquehanna Valley region of Pennsylvania. Counties in red are those through which the Susquehanna River and West Branch physically flow, while dark red counties are part of the watershed.
- Otsego County, New York
- Delaware County, New York
- Chenango County, New York
- Broome County, New York
- Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania
- Tioga County, New York
- Bradford County, Pennsylvania
- Wyoming County, Pennsylvania
- Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania
- Luzerne County, Pennsylvania
- Columbia County, Pennsylvania
- Montour County, Pennsylvania
- Potter County, Pennsylvania
- Tioga County, Pennsylvania
- Northumberland County, Pennsylvania
- Snyder County, Pennsylvania
- Juniata County, Pennsylvania
- Perry County, Pennsylvania
- Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
- Cumberland County, Pennsylvania
- York County, Pennsylvania
- Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
- Cecil County, Maryland
- Harford County, Maryland
West Branch
Counties
gollark: You might also want to use the window API, which is meant for this sort of "terminal occupying subset of screen" usecase.
gollark: ↑It's not really sandboxing, unless you want to lock down that "code" a lot and prevent it from doing lots of things, and not just redirect its terminal.
gollark: That seems bizarrely inefficient. Does anyone even *use* the distance thing on wired networks? Couldn't it be cached?
gollark: Some questions are just really bad though.
gollark: I mean, asking for evidence of things is reasonable.
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