- Niangua River
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The Niangua River (pronounced /naɪˈæŋɡwə/) is a 125-mile-long (201 km)[1] tributary of the Osage River in the Ozarks region of southern and central Missouri in the United States. Via the Osage and Missouri rivers it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River.
Contents
Course
The Niangua River is formed in Webster County by the confluence of its short east and west forks, and flows generally northward through Dallas, Laclede and Camden counties, past Bennett Spring, Lake Niangua, and Ha Ha Tonka State Parks. It flows into the Osage River as an arm of the Lake of the Ozarks, which is formed by the Bagnell Dam on the Osage. As part of the lake it collects the Little Niangua River.
River accesses
This is a list of areas where the Niangua River can be publicly accessed; this list was put in order from beginning of river to where river meets up with Lake of the Ozarks.
- Charity Access- State-owned river access; no camping allowed.
- Cline Ford
- Hico Slab- Where a road crosses the river; the bridge is basically a low-lying concrete slab with water tunnels.
- Del Marlin Ford
- Deusenberry Creek
- Gaunt Ford
- Crane Ford
- Route 32 Bridge
- Big John Access- State-owned river access.
- Wimberly Ford
- Dallion Ford
- Hackler Ford
- Williams Ford Access- A one lane road crossing; crossing is a concrete slab where water flows over the top.
- Hwy. K-P Bridge Access- Access includes privately-owned campground, picnic area, and shuttle service.
- Moon Valley Access- State-owned river access.
- Hildebrand Ford
- Cat Hollow- Privately-owned campground and cabins nearby.
- Route 64 Bridge
- Bennett Spring Access- State-owned river access.
- Barclary Springs- State-owned river access.
- Gilbertson Ford
- Prosperine Access- State-owned river access.
- Mountain Creek- Access includes privately-owned campground, picnic area, cabins and shuttle service.
- McPheters Ford
- Smith Ford
- Leadmine Conservation Area- State-owned river access and conservation area; primitive camping allowed.
- Lake Niangua- Includes access and picnic area; no camping allowed.
- Whistle Bridge- Low-lying river crossing where road crosses river.
- Stone Ford
- Ha Ha Tonka State Park- State-owned river access; this is where the river merges into Lake of the Ozarks.
See also
- List of Missouri rivers
References
- ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed May 31, 2011
- Columbia Gazetteer of North America entry
- DeLorme (2002). Missouri Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, Maine: DeLorme. ISBN 0-89933-353-2.
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Niangua River
Coordinates: 37°57′39″N 92°48′22″W / 37.96083°N 92.80611°W
Categories:- Rivers of Missouri
- Geography of Camden County, Missouri
- Geography of Dallas County, Missouri
- Geography of Laclede County, Missouri
- Geography of Webster County, Missouri
- Lake of the Ozarks
- Tributaries of the Missouri River
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