Pedernales River
Pedernales River | |
Texas | |
The Pedernales River in Pedernales Falls State Park
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Country | ![]() |
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State | ![]() |
Region | Edwards Plateau, Texas Hill Country |
Landmark | Pedernales Falls State Park |
Source | Kimble County, Texas |
- coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Mouth | Lake Travis, Travis County, Texas |
- elevation | 208 m (682 ft) |
- coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Length | 170 km (106 mi) |
Basin | 3,297 km2 (1,273 sq mi) |
Discharge | |
- average | 2.3 m3/s (81 cu ft/s) |
Location of Pedernales River, Texas
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Website: Pedernales River from the Handbook of Texas Online | |
The Pedernales River (/ˌpɜːrdəˈnælᵻs/ PUR-də-NAL-iss) is a tributary of the Colorado River, approximately 106 miles (171 km) long, in central Texas in the United States. It drains an area of the Edwards Plateau, flowing west to east across the Texas Hill Country west of Austin. The name "Pedernales", first used in the middle 18th century, comes from a Spanish word for the flint rocks characteristic of the riverbed.
Description
The river rises from springs in southeastern Kimble County, approximately 25 miles (40 km) southeast of Junction. It flows generally east into Gillespie County, past Fredericksburg, and into Blanco County, passing north of Johnson City. It joins the Colorado from the southwest in Lake Travis, approximately 10 miles (16 km) west of Austin.
The river has a close association with the Texas Hill Country, tied to the history of the region and emblematic of its geography. Along its route it flows over numerous rugged limestone escarpments as it winds eastward, passing along the south side of the ranch of President Lyndon B. Johnson,[1] who grew up in nearby Stonewall, south of the river.
In 1750, Fray Benito Fernández de Santa Ana proposed a plan to the Spanish government that a mission be established among the Lipan Apache who lived along the river. In 1789, the river was the site of a skirmish between Colonel Francisco Xavier Ugalde and a group of Lipan and Mescalero Indians. The first permanent white settlement along the river was in 1846, when the town of Fredericksburg was established by German immigrants. The threat of raids from Apaches restricted settlement in the area until the 1880s.
Pedernales Falls State Park is located along the river in Blanco County east of Johnson City. Like many rivers in central Texas, it is prone to variable water levels. A sign at the state park shows a relatively tranquil river in one picture and a raging wall of muddy water in the next picture, said to be taken only five minutes after the first. The speed at which flash floods can arise along this river has resulted in several deaths at the park, and warning sirens have been installed in the park and elsewhere along the river. The lower river is a popular destination for whitewater rafting during the high-water season.
See also
- List of Texas rivers
- Llano River
- Frio River
- Brazos River
- Colorado River (Texas)
- White River (Texas)
- Pecos River
- Rio Grande
References
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External links
- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Geobox usage tracking for river type
- Rivers and streams of Texas
- Tributaries of the Colorado River (Texas)
- Landforms of Kimble County, Texas
- Landforms of Gillespie County, Texas
- Landforms of Blanco County, Texas
- Landforms of Travis County, Texas
- Texas Hill Country