Caney River | |
River | |
Country | United States |
---|---|
States | Kansas, Oklahoma |
Source | Elk County, Kansas |
- coordinates | |
Mouth | Oologah Lake |
- coordinates | |
The Caney River is a 180-mile-long (290 km)[1] river in southern Kansas and northeastern Oklahoma. The river is a tributary of the Verdigris River, and is usually a flatwater stream.
The Caney forms in Elk County, Kansas, then moves south into Oklahoma near Elgin, Kansas. It then flows south through Osage County, where it is dammed near Bowring to form Hulah Lake. Downstream of the dam, the river flows into Washington County through the center of Bartlesville, where it separates the city's downtown from its residential east side. Just south of Bartlesville, the river turns southeast and flows into Rogers County, where it joins the Verdigris River between Collinsville and Claremore.
The dam at Hulah Lake is operated by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. In October 1986 the Corps was forced to open floodgates at the dam due to above-average rainfall in the Great Plains.[2] The resulting 500-year flood split Bartlesville virtually in half for several days and caused more than US$30 million in property damage.[3][4]