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    1. The Mississippi River is fed by thousands of tributaries, forming one of the largest drainage systems in the world. Its basin covers much of the central United States, carrying water from the Rockies, Appalachians, Great Lakes region and Gulf Coast toward the Gulf of Mexico.

    2. LastSeaworthiness767 on

      The reason that early USA railroads need to connect only east and west.

    3. shieldwolfchz on

      The Red River Valley between ND and Minnesota isn’t part of the Mississippi system.

    4. This map can’t be right. All rivers North of Lake Itasca in MN flow North to Hudson Bay.

    5. Though this map isn’t completely accurate, it’s a good representation of why America’s geography is so OP.

    6. What’s amazing is that all the rivers and streams form exactly at the US/Canada border!

    7. cormunculus on

      Ohio is extremely wrong, the Lakes/St Lawrence watershed only dips down just past Lima. Most of the state drains to the Ohio.

      Bad map.

    8. justseeingpendejadas on

      Whoever controlled this river would control this hemisphere. The US was lucky it did not stay in French or Spanish hands

    9. EyeoftheEelpout on

      Your map is not accurate.

      For example, in the Red River Valley in northern Minnesota and North Dakota, water flows into the Red River, which flows north and empties into Hudson Bay.

    10. serial-eater2 on

      inside USA, you mean. Because it’s clear the basin goes deep in Canada.

    11. Graychin877 on

      Do you have a version of this map that includes the parts of the US along the Canadian border? And maybe even the part of the watershed that’s inside Canada?

    12. dessertgrinch on

      to pile on the „this map is shit“ bandwagon, the Mississippi River watershed doesn’t dip into Alabama like that. The dongle that dips into central Alabama is part of the Black Warrior watershed.

    13. Tim-oBedlam on

      This map has been posted before and it is incorrect. Both Red Rivers are wrong: Red River of the North flows northwards into Lake Winnipeg and is not part of the Mississippi drainage, and the Red River starting in TX/Okla is mediated by the Old River Control Structure and flows into the Atchafalaya, never quite reaching the Mississippi.

      There’s a lot of ND and MN that isn’t part of the drainage.

    14. Username524 on

      Yeah, the Potomac headwaters are on this map, and per the other comments, seems there are many errors in the image.

    15. Initial-Ad-5462 on

      I’m only 64 so I might have a ways to go yet, but this is the worst map I’ve ever seen.

    16. eugenesbluegenes on

      Really illustrates how much drier the west is when you realize that the Ohio adds more water to the river system than the entire Missouri-Upper Mississippi.

    17. tarteaucitrons on

      Needs new title, Mississippi River and a cropped screenshot highlighting random tributaries around the US

    18. Not all. I don’t see the Frenchman River system in southern Saskatchewan.

    19. Button-Down-Shoes on

      I recently learned that there’s a canal built from the Chicago river to a Mississippi tributary that causes water to flow from Lake Michigan to the Mississipi, for the sake of waste disposal from Chicago. Obviously this is a much smaller amount than flows out the St Lawrence system, but does it mean that the Upper Great Lakes are tributaries to the Mississip?

    20. I have had people ask why the Mississippi river in New Orleans looks the way it does. I will save this picture to show them so they can understand that the silt and debris from the majority of the country flows down to one spot.

    21. Mangalorien on

      It’s kind of wild that you can hop into a boat in upstate New York and your friend can do the same in western Canada, and then you both float all the way downriver and meet each other in New Orleans.

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