Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Horse Creek (Tombigbee River)

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Main source
  
Clarke County

Discharge
  
800 m³/s

Source
  
Clarke County, Alabama

Basin size
  
60.4 sq mi (156 km)

Basin area
  
156 km²

River mouth
  
Marengo County, Tombigbee River 33 ft (10 m)

Mouths
  
Tombigbee River, Marengo County, Alabama

Horse Creek is a stream and tributary of the Tombigbee River in southern Marengo County and northern Clarke County in Alabama.

Contents

Location and characteristics

Horse Creek originates near the Choctaw Corner in Clarke County, at coordinates of 31.93626°N 87.75861°W / 31.93626; -87.75861, and discharges into the Tombigbee River near Putnam in Marengo County, at coordinates of 32.07709°N 88.05418°W / 32.07709; -88.05418. It has a watershed of 60.4 square miles (156 km2) and a discharge of 28,100 cubic feet (800 m3) per second.

Prehistoric period

Archaeological work during the 1980s indicated that Horse Creek may mark the southern boundary for the Miller 1 phase of the Miller culture. Prior to this work, the boundary was thought by scholars to lie 15 miles (24 km) north, near Breckenridge landing.

A truncated pyramidal platform mound near the mouth of the creek was briefly investigated by archeologist Clarence Bloomfield Moore on March 5, 1905, during his expedition around the Southern United States aboard his steamboat, the Gopher. Moore thought the mound to be domiciliary, as it was unlike the small rounded burial mounds that are typical of the area. Due to the scarcity of Mississippian sites in the lower Tombigbee River Valley, Moore tentatively dated it to the Woodland period.

References

Horse Creek (Tombigbee River) Wikipedia