Reese River
The Reese River is a 181-mile-long (291 km)[1] tributary of the Humboldt River, located in central Nevada in the western United States.
The Reese rises in the southern section of the Toiyabe Range, on the flanks of Arc Dome. In its upper reaches, the Reese River is a fast-flowing mountain stream surrounded by relatively lush growth including Aspen groves and cottonwood trees. It then flows north between the Toiyabe Range and the Shoshone Mountains for approximately half its length. The river then passes through a low point in the Shoshone Mountains and continues north between that range and the Fish Creek Mountains. Once it exits the Toiyabe Range it becomes a slow, muddy stream, and its waters are used for irrigation by scattered farms and ranches along its lower reaches. Although considered a tributary of the Humboldt, in most years the Reese dwindles into a chain of shallow pools long before it reaches the main stem. Only during infrequent floods does the Reese contribute water to the Humboldt, entering near Battle Mountain.[3] Nevada State Route 305 parallels the lower, usually dry portion of the channel from the Austin area to Battle Mountain.
The river is named after John Reese, who explored the area in 1854 as part of the expedition of Colonel Edward Steptoe, and who later served as a guide to Captain James H. Simpson's survey of a military road through central Nevada.[3] The mining boomtown of Austin, located in the upper reaches of the Reese River, names its long-lived newspaper the Reese River Reveille.[4]
References
- ↑ "The National Map". U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved Feb 10, 2011.
- ↑ "Pony Express Historic Resource Study (Chapter 8)". NPS.gov. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Horton, Gary A. (2000). Humboldt River Chronology: an Overview. Carson City, Nev.: Nevada Division of Water Planning. pp. 55-59.
- ↑ "Reese River Reveille Newspager, Austin, NV." Goaustinnevada.com. 2010. Web. 09 June 2012. <http://www.goaustinnevada.com/reveille.html>.