Crow Wing River

The Crow Wing River is a 113-mile-long (182 km) tributary of the Mississippi River in Minnesota, United States. The river rises at an elevation of about 1391 feet in a chain of 11 lakes in southern Hubbard County, Minnesota, and flows generally south, then east, entering the Mississippi at Crow Wing State Park northwest of Little Falls, Minnesota. Its name is a loose translation from the Ojibwe language Gaagaagiwigwani-ziibi ("Raven-feather River"). A wing-shaped island at its mouth accounts for the river's name. Because of its many campsites and its undeveloped shores, the Crow Wing River is considered one of the state's best "wilderness" routes for canoeists; although it is shallow (seldom more than 3 feet (0.91 m) deep), it is nearly always deep enough for canoeing.

Crow Wing River
The Crow Wing River in Old Wadena County Park
The Crow Wing River
Location
CountryUnited States
StateMinnesota
Physical characteristics
Source 
  coordinates47°00′07″N 94°44′29″W
  elevation1,391 ft (424 m)
Mouth 
  coordinates
46°16′16″N 94°20′23″W
  elevation
1,145 ft (349 m)
Length113-mile-long (182 km)
Discharge 
  locationPillager, MN
  average1,574 cu/ft. per sec.
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