Yentna River

The Yentna River[4] is a river in South Central Alaska, formed by its East Fork[2] and West Fork[3] at 62°16′50″N 151°46′26″W,[1] flows South-East to Susitna River, 30 miles (48 km) North-West of Anchorage, Alaska; Cook Inlet Low.[1]

Yentna River
Yentna River in Southcentral Alaska
Location of the mouth of the Yentna River in Alaska
Location
CountryUnited States of America
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationEast Fork Yentna River and
West Fork Yentna River
Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
  coordinates62°16′50″N 151°46′26″W[1]
  elevation200 ft (61 m)[2][3]
Mouth 
  location
Susitna River
Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
  coordinates
61°33′38″N 150°29′4″W[1]
  elevation
26 ft (7.9 m)[1]
Length75 mi (121 km)[1]

History

Tanaina Indian name reported by Spurr (1900, p. 46), United States Geological Survey. "Sometimes called Johnson River after the first white man to ascend it."[1]

Watershed

Location of Susitna, Alaska

It begins in the Mount Dall and Yentna glacier systems and flows southeast to the Susitna River 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Susitna. The river system (including upstream tributaries) is about 100 miles (160 km) long.

Tributaries

From mouth to source:

Lake Creek just about 8 miles down river from Bottle Creek. Major fishing area: kings, reds, silvers. Winter sports, hunting. Moose Creek, Indian Creek, Fish lakes Creek, Hewitt Creek, Malone's Slough, Donkey Creek, Johnson Creek, Clearwater Creek, Rich Creek, Flag Creek, Delta Creek, Fourth of July Creek, & Kichatna River round out the rest of the main Yentna River Tributaries.

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gollark: They assumed countries would act sanely.They were wrong.
gollark: I'm sure you can probably work out a better system if you don't go around confining it to either extreme.

See also

List of rivers of Alaska

References


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