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North Fork Coquille River

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- elevation
  
1,654 ft (504 m)

- average
  
945 cu ft/s (27 m/s)

Discharge
  
26.76 m³/s

Source
  
Coos Mountain

Country
  
United States of America

- elevation
  
13 ft (4 m)

Length
  
86 km

Basin area
  
398.9 km²

Mouth
  
Coquille River

Cities
  
Myrtle Point

North Fork Coquille River httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

- location
  
Oregon Coast Range, Coos County

- location
  
Myrtle Point, Coos County

- max
  
38,400 cu ft/s (1,087 m/s)

The North Fork Coquille River is a 53-mile (85 km) tributary of the Coquille River in the southern Oregon Coast Range in the U.S. state of Oregon. It begins at an elevation of about 1,700 feet (520 m) above sea level and drops to 13 feet (4.0 m) near Myrtle Point, where it joins the South Fork Coquille River to form the main stem.

Contents

Map of North Fork Coquille River, Oregon, USA

Course

About 53 miles (85 km) long, it starts as the confluence of several gulches on the east slope of Coos Mountain in Coos County. The river first flows north, but then turns west and south. It intersects Laverne County Park, passes through the rural community of Fairview and then Rock Prairie County Park before receiving Middle Creek from the left. It continues south through the hills and receives the East Fork Coquille River, also from the left, at the rural community of Gravelford. The river then turns west, meandering to a point north of Myrtle Point. Here it joins the South Fork Coquille River to form the Coquille, which flows west to the Pacific Ocean at Bandon.

Tributaries

Named tributaries of the North Fork Coquille River from source to mouth are Little North Fork Coquille River followed by North Fork, Giles, Neely, Whilley, Moon, Hudson, and Swayne creeks. Below this come Evans, Steele, Blair, Lost, Middle, Schoolhouse, Garage, Wood, and Wimer creeks. Next is the East Fork Coquille River followed by Johns, Kessler, Carey, and Llewellyn creeks.

Watershed

About 70 percent of the Coquille River basin is forested, and most of the forest land produces commercial timber. Other land uses in the basin include farming and mining. Population is very sparse on the forested slopes above the valleys.

References

North Fork Coquille River Wikipedia