Meadow Valley Wash
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Meadow Valley Wash is a river in southern Nevada in the United States, approximately 110 mi (177 km) long, It provides the principal drainage of the southeastern portion of the state northeast of Las Vegas. Formerly a tributary of the Virgin River, it now empties into Lake Mead on the Colorado River.
It rises in eastern Lincoln County, in the Wilson Creek Range. It flows generally south, past Panaca and Caliente, along the east side of the Delamar Mountains and west of the Meadow Valley Range into northeastern Clark County. It empties into the Muddy River west of Interstate 15 approximately 40 mi (64 km) northwest of Las Vegas, which in turn enters the northern arm of Lake Mead, just west of the mouth of the Virgin.
The wash has provided a green valley in the surrounding arid region that has been attractive to Native Americans and later to early Mormon settlers. A railroad was constructed along the wash in 1903 but was destroyed by floods in 1910.