Waterways forming and crossings of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway
This is a list of waterways that form the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway and crossings (bridges, tunnels and ferries) across it.
Florida
- Florida Bay
- Baker Cut (manmade)
- Buttonwood Sound
- Grouper Creek
- Tarpon Basin
- Dusenberg Creek
- Blackwater Sound
- Jewfish Creek
- Barnes Sound
- Little Card Sound
- Card Sound
- Biscayne Bay
- Biscayne Creek
- Dumfoundling Bay
- manmade canal
- Stranahan River
- New River
- New River Sound
- Middle River
- manmade canal
- Hillsboro River
- manmade canal (Hillsboro Canal branches off it)
- Lake Boca Raton
- Palmetto Park Road (CR 798)
- manmade canal?
- Lake Wyman
- Lake Rogers
- manmade canal
- Linton Boulevard (CR 782)
- SR 806
- George Bush Boulevard (CR 806A)
- Southeast 15th Avenue (CR 792)
- SR 804
- Lake Worth
- Lantana Bridge (Ocean Avenue)
- Harris Bridge (Florida) (SR 802)
- Southern Boulevard Bridge (US 98 (SR 80-SR 700))
- Royal Palm Bridge (SR 704)
- Flagler Memorial Bridge (SR A1A)
- Riviera Beach Bridge (SR A1A)
- Lake Worth Creek
- Loxahatchee River
- Jupiter Sound
- Hobe Sound
- Jupiter Narrows
- Peck Lake
- manmade canal
- Great Pocket
- Indian River
- Haulover Canal (manmade)
- Indian River North
- Mosquito Lagoon
- South Causeway (New Smyrna Beach) (SR A1A)
- North Causeway (New Smyrna Beach) (SR 44)
- Ponce de Leon Cut (manmade)
- Halifax River
- Halifax Creek
- Smith Creek
- manmade canal
- Fox Cut (manmade)
- manmade canal
- Matanzas River
- Tolomato River
- manmade canal
- Tolomato River
- manmade canal
- Pablo Creek
- Sisters Creek
- Gunnison Cut (manmade)
- Sawpit Creek
- manmade canal
- South Amelia River
- manmade canal
- Kingsley Creek
- Amelia River
- Cumberland Sound Florida/Georgia state line
Georgia
South Carolina
In South Carolina, the waterway is made of numerous natural and manmade waterways that wind among the sea islands.[1][2][3] The Pine Island cut is the longest manmade section of the entire waterway. It was the last section of the waterway to be completed and was dedicated on April 11, 1936.[4]
- Savannah River
- Fields Cut
- Wright River
- Watts Cut
- New River
- Ramshorn Creek
- Cooper River (Beaufort County, South Carolina)
- Calibogue Sound
- Skull Creek
- Port Royal Sound
- Beaufort River
- Ladies Island Swing Bridge
- Brickyard Creek
- Coosaw River
- Ashepoo Coosaw Cutoff
- Rock Creek
- Ashepoo Coosaw Cutoff
- Ashepoo River
- Fenwick Cut
- South Edisto River
- Watts Cut
- North Creek
- Dawhoo River
- Wadmalaw River
- Church Flats
- Stono River
- Elliott Cut
- Wappoo Creek
- Charleston Harbor
- Jeanette Creek
- Sullivans Narrows
- Meeting Reach
- Seven Reaches
- Copahee Sound
- Capers Creek
- Price Creek
- Seewee Bay
- manmade canal
- Graham Creek
- Awendaw Creek
- Harbor River
- Mathews Cut
- Casino Creek
- Fourmile Creek Canal (crosses South Santee River)
- North Santee River
- Estherville Minim Creek Canal
- Winyah Bay
- Waccamaw River
- L. W. Stau Bridge (fixed span)
- Socastee Creek
- Benjamin Thrailkill Bridge (fixed span)
- Socastee Swing Bridge (Dick Pond Road)[5]
- Pine Island cut (manmade canal, approximately 24 miles long)[6]
- Little River
North Carolina
Virginia
Maryland
Delaware
New Jersey
New York
Connecticut
Rhode Island
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Maine
References
- ^ National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Coast Survey (2009). Intracoastal Waterway: Beaufort River to St. Simons Sound (Map). 1 : 40,000. Nautical Charts. 11507. http://www.charts.noaa.gov/OnLineViewer/11507.shtml. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
- ^ National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Coast Survey (2009). Intracoastal Waterway: Casino Creek to Beaufort River (Map). 1 : 40,000. Nautical Charts. 11518. http://www.charts.noaa.gov/OnLineViewer/11518.shtml. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
- ^ National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Coast Survey (2009). Intracoastal Waterway: Myrtle Grove Sound and Cape Fear River to Casino Creek (Map). 1 : 40,000. Nautical Charts. 11534. http://www.charts.noaa.gov/OnLineViewer/11534.shtml. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
- ^ Lewis, Catherine Heniford (1998) (Google books). Horry County, South Carolina, 1730-1993. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. pp. xxiii, 192. ISBN 9781570032073. http://books.google.com/books?id=-dUfVeiy4yIC. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
- ^ Socastee Swing Bridge on HorryCounty.org
- ^ Intracoastal Waterway on HorryCounty.org
- ^ House Bill 4430 of the 110th session of the South Carolina General Assembly
- ^ Little River Bridge on HorryCounty.org
- ^ http://www.nyscanals.gov/exvac/landwater/index.html, 4th paragraph, as of 8-NOV-2007
2. Cruiser Net - http://www.cruisersnet.net/index.php?categoryid=65
See also