Willapa River

The Willapa River is a river on the Pacific coast of southwestern Washington in the United States, approximately 20 miles (32 km) long. It drains an area of low hills and a coastal plain into Willapa Bay, a large estuary north of the mouth of the Columbia River.

Willapa River
Location of the mouth of the Willapa River in Washington
Location
CountryUnited States
StateWashington
CountyPacific
Physical characteristics
SourceWillapa Hills
  locationWashington
  coordinates46°29′50″N 123°24′47″W[1]
MouthWillapa Bay
  location
Washington
  coordinates
46°42′27″N 123°51′2″W[1]
  elevation
0 ft (0 m)[1]
Length20 mi (32 km)
Discharge 
  locationriver mile 17.8, near Willapa, WA[2]
  average636 cu ft/s (18.0 m3/s)[2]
  minimum14 cu ft/s (0.40 m3/s)
  maximum12,800 cu ft/s (360 m3/s)

The river rises in the Willapa Hills in southeastern Pacific County, approximately 25 miles (40 km) west of Chehalis. It flows northwest in a winding course past the small communities of Willapa and Raymond. It enters the northwest end of Willapa Bay at South Bend.

Name

The name is that of the Willapa people, an Athapaskan-speaking people, now extinct, who occupied the valley of the river and also the prairies between the headwaters of the Chehalis and Cowlitz Rivers.[3] River has miocene fossils.

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gollark: Is there also apiolectricity?
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gollark: Oh, never mind, there are existing kinematics formulae for this case.
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See also

  • List of rivers of Washington

References



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