Emory River

Emory River
Emory River.jpg
The Emory River near Oakdale, Tennessee
Emoryrivermap.png
The Emory/Obed drainage basin
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTennessee
Physical characteristics
Sourcebelow Fork Mountain, near Frozen Head State Park in Morgan County
 ⁃ coordinates36°09′25″N 84°26′47″W / 36.15694°N 84.44639°W / 36.15694; -84.44639[1]
 ⁃ elevation2,450 ft (750 m)[1]
MouthClinch River at Kingston, Tennessee
 ⁃ coordinates
35°53′15″N 84°29′29″W / 35.88750°N 84.49139°W / 35.88750; -84.49139Coordinates: 35°53′15″N 84°29′29″W / 35.88750°N 84.49139°W / 35.88750; -84.49139[1]
 ⁃ elevation
741 ft (226 m)[1]
Basin size872 sq mi (2,260 km2)[3]
Discharge 
 ⁃ locationOakdale, Tennessee, 18.3 miles (29.5 km) above the mouth(mean for water years 1927-1983)[2]
 ⁃ average1,466 cu ft/s (41.5 m3/s)(mean for water years 1927-1983)[2]
 ⁃ minimum0 cu ft/s (0 m3/s)
Several occasions in 1944, 1952, and 1953[2]
 ⁃ maximum195,000 cu ft/s (5,500 m3/s)
March 1929[2]
Basin features
Tributaries 
 ⁃ leftLittle Emory River
 ⁃ rightObed River

The Emory River is a river draining a portion of Tennessee's Cumberland Plateau. It flows for just over 46 miles (74 km) from its source near Frozen Head State Park to its mouth along the Clinch River at Kingston, Tennessee.

Hydrography

The Emory River rises on the slopes of Fork Mountain and descends through a valley along the northern base of Bird Mountain, a prominent ridge in Frozen Head State Park in Morgan County. The surrounding area has been the subject of extensive strip mining for coal which has resulted in some stream pollution. The stream initially flows basically westward and is crossed by U.S. Highway 27. Turning more southwestward, it is paralleled for a time by a line of the Norfolk Southern Railway. It meets the Obed River in the southeast corner of the expansive Catoosa Wildlife Management Area, a large game-management area operated by the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.

Still paralleled by the railroad, the stream crosses into Roane County near Harriman. Backwaters of the Watts Bar Lake impoundment of the Tennessee River cause the water below Harriman to be somewhat slack. The Little Emory River is also impounded somewhat above its mouth into the Emory below Harriman.

The mouth of the Emory is into the Clinch River at the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston Power Plant, a coal-fired electric generation station initially developed during World War II, largely to power the uranium enrichment plants used to make the world's first atomic bomb at nearby Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The 2008 Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill heavily polluted the Emory River and surrounding area.

Etymology

According to a 1910 article in the Rockwood Times by Captain William E. McElwee,[4] the river was named after "William Emery", an early traveler who drowned while swimming the river with his "accoutrements" on. Early deed books sometimes refer to this as "William Emeries River".[5] The Indian name for the Emory River was "Babahatchie", which means "babbling waters." [6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Emory River
  2. ^ a b c d United States Geological Survey, Water Resources Data Tennessee: Water Year 1983, Water Data Report TN-83-1, p. 142. Gaging station 03540500.
  3. ^ "Emory River Watershed (06010208) of the Tennessee River Basin – Group 1, Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation website, 2002. Accessed: 5 June 2015.
  4. ^ On the Roane County Heritage Commission website Archived 2009-08-31 at the Wayback Machine (accessed December 1, 2009), Robert L. Bailey advises that the stories in the historical articles that McElhee published in the Rockwood Times between 1902 and 1919 "must be taken with 'a grain of salt.'"
  5. ^ Tennessee, Roane County Deed Book D, pages 7 & 8
  6. ^ Roberts, Snyder E. (1981) Roots of Roane County, Tennessee - 1792 -

External links


This page was last updated at 2019-11-11 06:43 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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