NISHNABOTNA RIVER

The mouth of the Nishnabotna River at the Missouri River

The 'Nishnabotna River' is a tributary of the Missouri River in southwestern Iowa, northwestern Missouri and southeastern Nebraska in the United States. It flows for most of its length as two parallel streams in Iowa, the 'East Nishnabotna River' and the 'West Nishnabotna River'. The east and west branches are each about 100 mi (160 km) long; from their confluence the Nishnabotna flows approximately another 12 mi (19 km).
Several sections of the rivers' courses have been straightened and heavily channelized.

Contents
Course
East Nishnabotna River
West Nishnabotna River
Lower river
Recreation
Variant names
Trivia
See also
Sources

Course


East Nishnabotna River

This excerpt from the Lewis and Clark map of 1814 shows the rivers of southwest Iowa, southeast Nebraska, and northwest Missouri. The "Nish-na-bot-to-na River" is seen in the west-central portion of the map.

The East Nishnabotna rises in southwestern Carroll County and flows generally south-southwestwardly through Audubon, Cass, Pottawattamie, Montgomery, Page and Fremont Counties, past the towns of Exira, Brayton, Atlantic, Lewis, Elliott, Red Oak and Riverton.
West Nishnabotna River

The West Nishnabotna River rises in southwestern Carroll County and also flows generally south-southwestwardly through Crawford, Shelby, Pottawattamie, Mills and Fremont Counties, past the towns of Manning, Irwin, Kirkman, Harlan, Avoca, Hancock, Oakland and Carson. At Harlan it collects the 'West Fork West Nishnabotna River', which rises in southwestern Carroll County and flows southwestwardly through Crawford and Shelby Counties, past Manilla and Defiance. Near Avoca it collects the 'East Branch West Nishnabotna River', which rises in southwestern Carroll County and flows southwestwardly through Audubon, Shelby and Pottawattamie Counties, past Gray. The West Nishnabotna was the topic of a humorous song on the 1976 C.W. McCall album Rubber Duck.
Lower river

The East and West rivers merge in southwestern Fremont County and continue as the Nishnabotna River for its short course past Hamburg and into northwestern Atchison County, Missouri, where it flows into the Missouri River 2 mi (3 km) west of Watson.
The Nishnabotna River enters Nemaha County, Nebraska for about 0.5 mi (0.8 km) just above the confluence with the Missouri River; the Nebraska-Missouri state line runs to the east of the Missouri River in this area. [1], [2]

Recreation


Parks along the river include Botna Bend in Hancock, Willow Slough Wildlife Management Area 3 miles southwest of Henderson, and Riverton Wildlife Management Area, just north of Riverton. Canoe rentals are available at Botna Bend. The best paddling is between Hancock and Carson on the west fork and between Lewis and Griswold on the east fork (see "Paddling Iowa" by Nate Hoogeveen). The Wabash Trace hiking trail crosses both forks. At its crossing of the west fork one can see the wreckage of a freight train that derailed and went into the drink in the 1960s.

Variant names


According to the Geographic Names Information System, the river has also been known as:

★ Good Canoe River
★ Nishabotna River
★ Nishabotny River
★ Nishabotony River
★ Nishebotona River
★ Nishnabotony River

★ Nishnebotna River
★ Nishnebotne River
★ Nishnebotona River
★ Nishnebottona River
★ Willo River
★ Willow Slough

Trivia



★ The Nisnabotna is mentioned in C.W. McCall's ''Four Wheel Drive'', where it is sarcastically referred to as "a yard wide and a foot deep"

See also



List of Iowa rivers

List of Missouri rivers

List of Nebraska rivers

Mormon Trail

Sources



Columbia Gazetteer of North America entry

DeLorme (1998). ''Iowa Atlas & Gazetteer''. Yarmouth, Maine: DeLorme. ISBN 0-89933-214-5.

DeLorme (2002). ''Missouri Atlas & Gazetteer''. Yarmouth, Maine: DeLorme. ISBN 0-89933-353-2.

★ GNIS entries for , , , ,

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