Shell River (Minnesota)

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Shell River
none The Shell River in Straight River Township in 2007
The Shell River in Straight River Township in 2007
Country United States
State Minnesota
Length 45.4 mi (73 km) [1]
Discharge at at mouth
 - average 250 cu ft/s (7 /s) [2]
Source Shell Lake
 - location Carsonville Township, Becker County
 - coordinates 46°56′50″N 95°24′39″W / 46.94722, -95.41083 [3]
 - elevation 1,519 ft (463 m) [4]
Mouth Crow Wing River
 - location Crow Wing Lake Township, Hubbard County
 - coordinates 46°48′26″N 94°53′16″W / 46.80722, -94.88778 [3]
 - elevation 1,362 ft (415 m) [4]
Major tributaries
 - left Fish Hook River
 - right Blueberry River

The Shell River is a tributary of the Crow Wing River, 45 miles (73 km) long, in north-central Minnesota in the United States. Via the Crow Wing River, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining a rural region.

The river was named for mussel and clam shells found along the river and along Shell Lake, its origin.[5]

[edit] Geography

The Shell River issues from Shell Lake approximately three miles (5 km) southwest of Pine Point in Carsonville Township in eastern Becker County, and initially flows southeastwardly through the Smoky Hills State Forest into southwestern Hubbard County and northwestern Wadena County, to Blueberry Lake, which collects the Blueberry River. From Blueberry Lake, the Shell River flows eastwardly in a winding course through northern Wadena and southern Hubbard Counties, passing through Huntersville State Forest and collecting the Fish Hook River from the north. It flows into the Crow Wing River in Crow Wing Lake Township in Hubbard County.[6] The Shell River is the Crow Wing River's first significant tributary, and is substantially the larger of the two at their confluence; the Shell's average discharge of 250 cubic feet per second (7 m³/s) is approximately three times the Crow Wing's discharge above the confluence.[2]

The Shell River flows in the Northern Lakes and Forests ecoregion, which is characterized by conifer and hardwood forests on flat and rolling till plains and outwash plains.[7] The lower course of the river below Blueberry Lake can be canoed, and supports a sport fishing population of northern pike. Clams are present in great quantities on the river bottom, and the former community of Shell City in Shell River Township was once the site of a button factory which made use of their shells.[2]

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