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Huron River (Michigan)
・ Huron River (northern Michigan)
・ Huron River (Ohio)
・ Huron river chain of lakes
・ Huron School District (South Dakota)
・ Huron Shores
・ Huron South
・ Huron Street
・ Huron Street (album)
・ Huron Subdivision
・ Huron Swamp
・ Huron Towers
・ Huron Township
・ Huron Township, Des Moines County, Iowa
・ Huron Township, Erie County, Ohio


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Huron River (Michigan) : ウィキペディア英語版
Huron River (Michigan)



The Huron River is a 〔U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. (The National Map ), accessed November 7, 2011〕 river in southeastern Michigan, rising out of the Huron Swamp in Indian Springs Metropark in northern Oakland County and flowing into Lake Erie on the boundary between Wayne County and Monroe County. In addition to thirteen parks, game areas, and recreation areas, the river passes through the cities of Dexter, Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Belleville, Flat Rock and Rockwood.
The Huron River is a typical Southeast Michigan stream; mud banks, slow stream flow and a low gradient define this river. It runs through the following counties, in order from the headwaters to its mouth: Oakland, Livingston, Washtenaw, Wayne, and Monroe. There are 24 major tributaries totaling about in addition to the mainstream. The Huron River watershed drains . It is the only state-designated Country-Scenic Natural River in southeast Michigan. This includes of the mainstream, plus an additional of three tributaries.
The river was named after the Huron band of Native Americans who lived in the area. In Native languages, it was called ''cos-scut-e-nong sebee'' or ''Giwitatigweiasibi''. It was part of a Native American trade route.
The river has many dams, 19 on the mainstream and at least 96 in the entire system. Most dams are only a few feet high, built to slightly increase and maintain water levels in existing lakes to provide drought protection and flood control, a use that is now environmentally controversial. However, at least a dozen dams were built for mill or hydroelectric power and several formed large new lakes behind them. Some of these on the Huron River mainstream are Kent Lake, Barton Pond, Argo Pond, Ford Lake, Belleville Lake, and Flat Rock Pond.
The Huron River flows through numerous parks and is a prime canoeing river with a generally slow current and only a few minor rapids or obstructions, except for the short Delhi rapids which is runnable by experienced canoeists and kayakers except during low water.
The river is heavily fished by sportsmen for rock bass, sunfish, bluegill, black crappie, white bass, smallmouth bass, largemouth bass, northern pike, walleye, catfish, trout, muskie, and below Belleville Dam, Coho salmon, Chinook salmon, and Steelhead. Suckers and carp are also common fish in the river.
In 2009, faculty and students from the University of Michigan produced "Mapping the River," a multimedia presentation combining dance, poetry, music, and projected images which explored the role of the Huron in communities along it.〔

==History==
The Huron River was declared navigable by Congress in the 19th century, and for a time, there was flat-boat traffic from Ypsilanti to Lake Erie. This was discontinued as the railroads penetrated the region and milling developed along the river. By the 1880s, the Huron River was considered peculiar among the rivers in the region because it was intensely exploited for water-powered manufacturing. The census reported a total of 17 developed mill dams on the river, many providing power to multiple mills. Flour milling dominated, but there were also sawmills and woolen mills.〔James L. Greenleaf, Report on the Water-Powers of the Drainage Basins of Lakes Huron and Erie, Eastern Drainage Area of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, Huron River, Description of Developed Power, in (Water Power of the United States, Part I ) Department of the Interior, Census Office, GPO, Washington, 1885; page 494.〕
As the 20th century began, the Detroit Edison Company and Ford Motor Company began acquiring and developing dams along the river for electric power.〔General Electrical News, Power Plants, Detroit Mich. (Electricity ) Vol. 30, No. 8 (Feb. 21, 1908); page 111.〕〔(The Huron River: Voices from the Watershed ), edited by John Ray Knott, Keith Taylor, University of Michigan Press, 2000, p. 194〕

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