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قراءة كتاب Fish Populations, Following a Drought, in the Neosho and Marais des Cygnes Rivers of Kansas

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Fish Populations, Following a Drought, in the Neosho and Marais des Cygnes Rivers of Kansas

Fish Populations, Following a Drought, in the Neosho and Marais des Cygnes Rivers of Kansas

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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6,480 0 1956 10.1 5,250 0 1957 68.5 12,300 0 1958 131.0 5,360 .8 1959 114.0 7,250 8.5

Table 2. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Neosho River near Parsons, Kansas. Drainage Area: 4905 Square Miles.

Water-year[B] Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 8,290 410,000 124.0
1952 2,021 20,500 20.0
1953 173 4,110 .3
1954 430 27,900 .1
1955 645 18,600 0
1956 180 6,170 0
1957 1,774 25,000 0
1958 3,092 27,200 78.0
1959 1,609 22,600 139.0

Table 3. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Marais des Cygnes River Near Ottawa, Kansas. Drainage Area: 1,250 Square Miles.

Water-year Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 2,113 142,000 25.0
1952 542 12,000 .2
1953 36.5 2,690 .2
1954 73.6 5,660 .5
1955 75.7 5,240 .7
1956 26 1,590 .7
1957 442 11,200 .7
1958 775 9,130 5.6

Table 4. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Marais des Cygnes River at Trading Post, Kansas. Drainage Area: 2,880 Square Miles.

Water-year Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 5,489 148,000 36.0
1952 1,750 20,400 3.0
1953 261 7,590 0
1954 334 12,500 0
1955 786 16,100 .2
1956 202 10,000 0
1957 871 14,700 0
1958 2,453 20,400 120.0
[C]1959 750 10,900 3.4

DESCRIPTION OF NEOSHO RIVER

The Neosho River, a tributary of Arkansas River, rises in the Flint Hills of Morris and southwestern Wabaunsee counties and flows southeast for 281 miles in Kansas, leaving the state in the extreme southeast corner (Fig. 1). With its tributaries (including Cottonwood and Spring rivers) the Neosho drains 6,285 square miles in Kansas and enters the Arkansas River near Muskogee, Oklahoma (Schoewe, 1951:299). Upstream from its confluence with Cottonwood River, the Neosho River has an average gradient of 15 feet per mile. The gradient lessens rapidly below the mouth of the Cottonwood, averaging 1.35 feet per mile downstream to the State line (Anonymous, 1947:12). The banks of the meandering, well-defined channel vary from 15 to 50 feet in height and support a deciduous fringe-forest. The spelling of the name originally was "Neozho," an Osage Indian word signifying "clear water" (Mead, 1903:216).

Fig. 1. Neosho and Marais des Cygnes drainage systems. Dots and circles indicate collecting-stations. Fig. 1.

Neosho River, Upper Station.—Two miles north and two miles west of Council Grove, Morris County, Kansas (Sec. 32 and 33, T. 15 S., R. 8 E.) (Pl. 28, Fig. 2, and Pl. 29, Fig. 1). Width 20 to 40 feet, depth to six feet, length of study-area one-half mile (one large pool plus many small pools connected by riffles), bottom of mud, gravel, and rubble. Muddy banks 20 to 30 feet high.

According to H. E. Bosch (landowner) this section of the river dried completely in 1956, except for the large pool mentioned above. This section was intermittent in 1954 and 1955; it again became intermittent in the late summer of 1957 but not in 1958 or 1959.

A second section two miles downstream (on land owned by Herbert White) was studied in the summer of 1959 (Sec. 3 and 10, T. 16 S., R. 8 E.) (Pl. 29, Fig. 2 and Pl. 30, Figs. 1 and 2). This section is 20 to 60 feet in width, to five feet in depth, one-half mile in length (six small pools with intervening riffles bounded upstream by a low-head dam and downstream by a long pool), having a bottom of gravel, rubble, bedrock, and mud, and banks of mud and rock, five to 20 feet in height.

Neosho River, Middle Station.—One mile east and one and one-half miles

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