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Encyclopedia > Ecorse River
The north branch at Council Point Park in Lincoln Park
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The north branch at Council Point Park in Lincoln Park

The Ecorse River is a minor river in southern Michigan. It flows through the Downriver section of Metro Detroit and is a tributary of the Detroit River. It is sometimes identified as Ecorse Creek. The early French settlers named it the Rivière aux Écorces, meaning the "bark river". The river was named this because of a Native American custom of wrapping their dead in birch or elm bark, and burying them at the mouth of the river." here The river has two branches, called the north and south branches which meet at Council Point Park in Lincoln Park where Chief Pontiac once held a council in 1763 before attacking Fort Detroit. Lincoln Park is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... The Murray River in Australia. ... Official language(s) English de-facto Capital Lansing Largest city Detroit Area  - Total  - Width  - Length  - % water  - Latitude  - Longitude Ranked 11th 96,889 mi² 250,941 km² 239 miles 385 km 491 miles 790 km 41. ... The Detroit CMSA is colored in yellow. ... Landsat satellite photo, showing Lake Saint Clair, as well as St. ... A Hupa man, 1923 The scope of this indigenous peoples of the Americas article encompasses the definitions of indigenous peoples and the Americas as established in their respective articles. ... Lincoln Park is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... No authentic images of Pontiac are known to exist. ... Building and origins of Fort Detroit Fort Detroit began as a settlement on the Detroit River called Fort Ponchartrain. ...


The river has a very low gradient and is subject to heavy silting which worsens the seasonal flooding. Much of the watershed has a clay soil 20 to 65 feet deep which limits ground absorption and 85% of the land in the entire watershed is developed as residential or commercial/industrial which decreases the available land surface for absorption. Homes near the river are required to carry flood insurance and damaging flooding is a common occurrence. A storm on May 21, 2004 with 4" of rain resulted in the river rising over 6 feet in only 3 hours. Quaternary clay in Estonia. ... May 21 is the 141st day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (142nd in leap years). ... 2004 (MMIV) was a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


The river system consists of a 13-mile long South Branch, including the Sexton-Kilfoil Drain, and a 16-mile long North Branch which combine and run another 0.5 miles. Elevations run from 670 feet in the northwest corner of the watershed to 575 feet at the Detroit River. It has a mean yearly flow of 3.2 cubic feet per second. The Ecorse River has a watershed of 43.4 square miles. The north branch drains 18.75 sq mi and has tributaries designated the Trouton Drain, Freeman Drain, Black Creek, and the Douglas and Kelly Drain. The north branch flows within The south branch has a drainage area of 12 sq mi and tributaries include the Grams Drain in Southgate, and the Brighton, Bondie, and the Sloss and Ganong Drains in Taylor. The rest of the watershed is drained by enclosed underground drains; the largest of which is the La Blanc Drain which enters the north branch about 500 feet north of the junction of the north and south branches. The La Blanc Drain drains 12 squares miles. A watershed is a region of land where water drains downhill into a specified body of water, such as a river, lake, sea, ocean or wetland. ...


The north branch flows through Romulus, Dearborn Heights, Allen Park, along a small portion of the southern border of Melvindale, Lincoln Park and then along the border of Lincoln Park and Ecorse. The south branch flows through Romulus, Taylor, Allen Park and Lincoln Park. It is joined by the Sexton and Kilfoil Drain in Taylor. After the two branches join in Lincoln Park, the river flows along the boundary between Ecorse and Wyandotte to its mouth on the Detroit River. A marina occupies both banks of the river at its mouth. Romulus is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... Dearborn Heights is a city located in Wayne County in the U.S. state in Michigan. ... Allen Park is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... Melvindale is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... Ecorse is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... Taylor is a city located in Wayne County, Michigan. ... One of the shops along Biddle Avenue in Downtown Wyandotte. ... Landsat satellite photo, showing Lake Saint Clair, as well as St. ...


The Ecorse River flows into the Detroit River about midway along that river's course. The next river north of the Ecorse is the Rouge River while the next river south is the Huron River. The Huron River is the name of three different rivers in Michigan. ...


The watershed is heavily developed, with a population density of 3,711 people per square mile in 2000. It is also heavily industrialized with both light and heavy industry. Contamination is a problem, both from ongoing industrial and residential sources and as a legacy of the steel works along its lower length.


Note

Some sources designate the North and South branches as Ecorse Creek and only the 0.5 mile long combined stream as Ecorse River.


See also

This is a list of Michigan rivers. ...

External link


  Results from FactBites:
 
Detroit River - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (545 words)
Historical events concerning the Detroit River began with the arrival of the French voyageurs, the first non-natives to navigate the river and land on Detroit's shores.
During the Civil War, the river was patrolled in case of a Confederate attack from the Canadian north.
The river flows past the American towns of Detroit, River Rouge, Ecorse, Wyandotte, Grosse Ile, Riverview, Trenton, and Gibraltar and the Canadian towns of Windsor, LaSalle and Amherstburg.
Downriver - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (690 words)
The Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge and the Downriver Linked Greenways Initiative are two environmental preservation and recreation projects ongoing in the region.
Northern Downriver communities near Detroit and Dearborn, Michigan (such as Allen Park, Lincoln Park, Wyandotte, River Rouge, Melvindale and Ecorse) were developed in the 1920s-1940s and are identified by brick and mortar homes (often bungalows), tree-lined streets and Works Progress Administration-designed municipal buildings.
Some Downriver communities were once known for their large number of people of Southern origin who had migrated to Michigan to work in the automotive industry during the early to mid-20th Century; indeed, traces of the Southern accent are preserved by some residents, although this influence is fading.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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