Atlantic Creek

Atlantic Creek
Modified portion of the USGS Two Ocean Pass showing Atlantic Creek flowing northeast[1]
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationTwo Ocean Pass
 • coordinates44°00′58″N 110°09′23″W / 44.01611°N 110.15639°W / 44.01611; -110.15639
 • elevation8,130 ft (2,480 m)
Mouth 
 • location
Confluence with Yellowstone River
 • coordinates
44°05′56.043″N 110°06′0.6″W / 44.09890083°N 110.100167°W / 44.09890083; -110.100167
 • elevation
7,860 ft (2,400 m)

Atlantic Creek is one of two rivers formed at the hydrologically unique site of the Parting of the Waters. The creek begins in the Teton Wilderness of Bridger-Teton National Forest in the U.S. state of Wyoming near the southern border of Yellowstone National Park. It originates directly on the continental divide from North Two Ocean Creek, which splits roughly in half at the Parting of the Waters. One half of the flow becomes the headwater of Atlantic Creek, while the other half becomes the source of Pacific Creek.[2]

Course to Atlantic Ocean

Atlantic Creek, as its name suggests, ultimately flows into the Atlantic Ocean 3,488 mi (5,613 km) away.[3] From the Parting of the Waters, it flows northeast over five miles of wilderness through the alpine valley of Two Ocean Pass and ends it short run into the Yellowstone River approximately 15 mi (24 km) southeast of Yellowstone Lake.

Following the flow of water to the Atlantic Ocean, the Yellowstone River meanders north in its river plain feeding Yellowstone Lake from the south and leaving the lake's northern edge. The river continues north going over both Yellowstone Falls, through the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, and eventually flows into the Missouri River in far western North Dakota. From the confluence of the Yellowstone and Missouri, the Missouri flows mostly south across the Dakotas. It then forms the borders of Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri before finally flowing east into the Mississippi River which empties into the Gulf of Mexico in Louisiana.

1894 Illustration of Two ocean pass with Atlantic Creek visible
An 1894 drawing of Two Ocean Pass with a view to the northeast. Atlantic Creek exits the pass between the hills in the upper center part of the image. Pacific Creek exits to the southwest in the bottom center of the image. North Two Oceans Creek enters from the left top center of the image and divides into its two distributaries and South Two Ocean Creek enters from the right center of the image and is also shown dividing into two streams. Evermann Creek also enters the area from the west (left center, just above the tents).

Atlantic Creek's twin, Pacific Creek, takes the other half of flow from North Two Ocean Creek. It flows further than the relatively short run of Atlantic Creek, emptying at Moran, Wyoming over 20 miles to the southwest into the Snake River below Jackson Lake Dam and ultimately the Pacific Ocean 1,353 mi (2,177 km) away via the Columbia River.

See also

References

  1. ^ Two Ocean Pass Quadrangle, Wyoming-Teton Co. USGS Topographic Quadrangle, 1996: Note the 1996 quad does not show a split in the continental divide; however both the 1959 Two Ocean Pass, Wyoming 15 minute quadrangle and the 1982 Yellowstone National Park South, Wyo. 30x60 minute quad do show a split in the continental divide which includes the drainage basins of both North Two Ocean Creek and South Two Ocean Creek. The divide split is 8.7 kilometres (5.4 mi) in length.
  2. ^ "Two Ocean Pass — A place where fish can swim over the continetal divide!". USGS.gov. Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. Retrieved 23 December 2024.
  3. ^ Herman, Eric. "The Two-Ocean Stream". Watershapes.com. Retrieved 23 December 2024.