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Encyclopedia > Malheur River

The Malheur River (pronounced "muh-LOOR") is a tributary of the Snake River, approximately 165 mi (266 km) long, in east central Oregon in the United States. It drains a high desert plateau region south of the Blue Mountains between the Harney Basin and the Snake.

Contents

Description

It rises in the southern Blue Mountains of southern Grant County, south of Strawberry Mountain. It flows south through Malheur National Forest, then southeast past Drewsey and through Warm Springs Reservoir. At Riverside in eastern Malheur County it receives the South Fork from the south, then turns sharply back northward to Juntura, where it receives the North Fork form the north. From Juntura it flows generally east past Vale, joining the Snake from the west approximately 2 mi (3 km) north of Ontario, Oregon.


The lower river near Ontario is used for irrigation in the agricultural potato-growing in the valley of the Snake along the Idaho-Oregon border. Agricultural runoff has resulted in a phosphorus pollution problem in its lower reaches.


Despite the similarity of name, the river does not flow into nearby Malheur Lake, which is located in the enclosed Harney Basin southwest of the watershed of the river.


History

The name of the river means "bad fortune" or "unhappiness" in French. It was given the name in 1825 by Peter Skene Ogden, a fur trapper in the Hudson's Bay Company who lost cached furs along the river.


The river lived up to its name a second time in 1845, when mountain man Stephen Meek, seeking a faster route along the Oregon Trail, led a migrant party up the river valley into the high desert along a route that has since become known as the Meek Cutoff. After leaving the river valley the party was unable to find a water supply and lost 23 people by the time they reached The Dalles on the Columbia River.


In 1853 the river was used more successfully as the route of the Free Emigrant Road, a branch of the Oregon Trail that cut directly across eastern Oregon to Eugene at the south end of the Willamette Valley.


See also

External links

  • Malheur River (http://tomlaidlaw.com/clickable/malheur.html)
  • Meek Cutoff (http://www.endoftheoregontrail.org/oregontrails/meek.html)
  • Free Emigrant Road (http://www.endoftheoregontrail.org/oregontrails/freeemigrantroad.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Malheur County History (511 words)
The Malheur County Courthouse in Vale was built in 1958 to replace a courthouse built in 1902.
Malheur County is the second largest county in the state with 9,874 square miles.
Malheur County held its first general election in 1888 to elect a judge, sheriff, clerk, two commissioners, treasurer, assessor, superintendent of schools, and coroner.
PHOSPHORUS CONTENT OF THE MALHEUR RIVER (2362 words)
Results from the 1978-1979 Malheur County survey show that more orthophosphate was transported by the Middle Malheur River plus the North Fork of the Malheur River at Juntura, than by the main stem of the Malheur River east of Vale (Figure 9, Malheur County Court, 1981).
In this stretch of the Malheur River, the highest observed total P at Namorf (0.48 mg/L) and Juntura (0.39 mg/L) occurred in association with early spring flows from snow melt or rain on snow (Figs.
Geological contributions of P to the lower Malheur River basin are poorly understood.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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