Withlacoochee River (North)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the northern Withlacoochee River. For the southern river, see Withlacoochee River (South).
The Withlacoochee River (North) originates in Georgia, northwest of Valdosta. It flows south into Florida, and eventually merges with the Suwannee at Suwannee River State Park west of Live Oak. It is believed to be the source for the name of the central Florida river.
[edit] Etymology
"Withlacoochee" probably stems from a Muskhogean dialect, which suggests that its application is comparatively recent. It is compounded of Creek we (water), thlako (big), and chee (little), or little big water. This word combination signifies little river in the Creek language, and as we-lako or wethlako may also refer to a lake, it may signify a river of lakes, or lake river. The Withlacoochee flows just to the eastward of Tsala Apopka Lake, and the St. Johns River which flows through a series of large and small lakes was called welaka by the Seminoles.[1]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Simpson, J. Clarence (1956). in Mark F. Boyd: Florida Place-Names of Indian Derivation. Tallahassee, Florida: Florida Geological Survey.
[edit] External links
- Withlacoochee River (North) Canoe Trail at Florida Department of Environmental Protection
- Rivers that flow north at EcoFlorida
- Withlacoochee River (North): Georgia State Line to Suwannee River State Park at Trails.com