Kings River (Arkansas)

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coordinates35°50′00″N 93°34′50″W / 35.83333°N 93.58056°W / 35.83333; -93.58056[1]
Kings River
Kings River Falls within the Kings River Natural Area, Madison County, Arkansas
Location
CountryUnited States
StateArkansas and Missouri
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationMadison County, Arkansas
  coordinates35°50′00″N 93°34′50″W / 35.83333°N 93.58056°W / 35.83333; -93.58056[1]
  elevation2,270[2] ft (690 m)
Mouth 
  location
Table Rock Lake, Carroll County, Arkansas
  coordinates
36°29′29″N 93°34′40″W / 36.49139°N 93.57778°W / 36.49139; -93.57778
(confluence with Table Rock Lake waters in northern Carroll County, Arkansas)[3]
  elevation
915 ft (279 m)
Discharge 
  locationBerryville, Arkansas
  average583 c/ft. per sec.[4]

The Kings River is a tributary of the White River. It rises in the Boston Mountains of Arkansas and flows northward for more than 90 miles into Table Rock Lake in Missouri. The Arkansas portion of the river is undammed and bordered by rural and forested land, the river is popular for paddling and sport fishing.

The highest sources of the Kings River are at an elevation of more than 2,000 feet (610 m) on the north slope of the Boston Mountains in the Ozark National Forest. The stream headwaters arise on the north flank of a ridge about 1.5 miles east of Boston at an elevation of about 2270 feet.[2] The stream flows generally north through the Kings River Falls Natural Area. It passes under Arkansas Highway 74 and past Kingston and flows roughly parallel to Arkansas Highway 21 then turns northwest to pass U.S. Route 412 just east of Marble. It continues to the northwest becoming a portion of the Madison - Carroll county line east of Rockhouse. It enters Carroll County and meanders north passing under U. S. Route 62 west of Berryville. It passes under Arkansas Highway 143 south of Grandview and enters Table Rock Lake and the Missouri line at the Stone-Barry county line southwest of Carr Lane on Missouri Route 86.[5]

The river follows a meandering course with the confluence with the White River being almost due north of the source with a drainage basin of 591 square miles (1,530 km2), before emptying into Table Rock Lake, a reservoir on the White River at an elevation of 915 feet (279 m).[6] The Missouri portion of the river and its confluence with the White River is flooded as part of Table Rock Lake.[7][8]

The town of Berryville is the only incorporated city within the watershed. Near Berryville, the average annual mean flow of the Kings River from 1935 to 2008 was 572 cubic feet of water per second.[9]

Tributaries of the Kings River include Felkins Creek, Maxwell Creek, Pine Creek, Keels Creek, Dry Fork Creek and Osage Creek.[5][10]

History

Conservation and recreation

References

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