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Fremont River

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The Fremont River near Cainville, looking north

The Fremont River in Utah flows from the Johnson Valley Reservoir, which is located on the Wasatch Plateau near Fish Lake, southwest through Capitol Reef National Park to the Muddy Creek near Hanksville where the two rivers combine to form the Dirty Devil River, a tributary of the Colorado River.

Course

The Johnson Valley Reservoir is fed by Sevenmile Creek (from north) and Lake Creek (from soutwest), the Fremont River passes through Fremont, Loa, Lyman, Bicknell, Teasdale, and Torrey and provides year round irrigation for the agricultural lands of Rabbit Valley and Caineville. Then it heads through Hanksville and afterwards to its mouth.

Miscellaneous

The Fremont River has a drainage area of 751 square miles (1,950 km2) fed by spring snow melt off Thousand Lake Mountain, Boulder Mountain, and the northern Henry Mountains. The river is presumably named after John Charles Fremont, "the Great Pathfinder". It gives its name to the Fremont culture, a Precolumbian archaeological culture.

Flow

Flow (ft^3/s), by month (1977-2003), at Bicknell gauging station:

Month Mean Min Max
January 85.6 54.1 145.0
February 90.9 59.7 140.0
March 86.6 63.7 133.0
April 89.2 66.1 131.0
May 96.2 70.0 135.0
June 112.0 66.4 243.0
July 119.0 63.3 412.0
August 86.4 58.7 163.0
September 70.7 46.1 174.0
October 67.5 50.7 135.0
November 74.2 46.3 139.0
December 77.0 51.4 119.0

See also