Hudson River

Hudson River
Ka’nón:no (Mohawk)
Mahicannittuk (Mahican)
Muhheakantuck / Mahicannitukw (Munsee)
Bear Mountain Bridge across the Hudson River as seen from Bear Mountain in New York state
The Hudson River Watershed, including the Hudson and Mohawk rivers
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York, New Jersey
CitySee Populated places on the Hudson River
Physical characteristics
SourceHenderson Lake (New York)
(See Sources)
  locationAdirondack Mountains, New York, United States
  coordinates44°05′29″N 74°03′33″W / 44.09139°N 74.05917°W / 44.09139; -74.05917
  elevation1,770 ft (540 m)
MouthAtlantic Ocean, New York Harbor
  location
Jersey City, New Jersey and Lower Manhattan, New York, United States
  coordinates
40°41′48″N 74°01′42″W / 40.69667°N 74.02833°W / 40.69667; -74.02833
  elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Length315 mi (507 km)
Basin size14,000 sq mi (36,000 km2)
Depth 
  average30 ft (9.1 m)
(extent south of Troy)
  maximum202 ft (62 m)
Discharge 
  locationLower New York Bay
  average21,900 cu ft/s (620 m3/s)
Discharge 
  locationGreen Island
  average17,400 cu ft/s (490 m3/s)
  minimum882 cu ft/s (25.0 m3/s)
  maximum215,000 cu ft/s (6,100 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftBoreas River, Schroon River, Batten Kill, Hoosic River, Kinderhook Creek, Roeliff Jansen Kill, Wappinger Creek, Croton River, Sing Sing Kill, Fishkill
  rightCedar River, Indian River, Sacandaga River, Mohawk River, Normans Kill, Catskill Creek, Esopus Creek, Rondout Creek, Wallkill River
WaterfallsOrd Falls, Spier Falls, Glens Falls, Bakers Falls

The Hudson River, historically the North River, is a 315-mile (507 km) river that flows from north to south largely through eastern New York state. It originates in the Adirondack Mountains at Henderson Lake in the town of Newcomb, and flows south to the New York Bay, a tidal estuary between New York and Jersey City, before draining into the Atlantic Ocean. The river marks boundaries between several New York counties and the eastern border between the U.S. states of New York and New Jersey. The lower half of the river is a tidal estuary, deeper than the body of water into which it flows, occupying the Hudson Fjord, an inlet that formed during the most recent period of North American glaciation, estimated at 26,000 to 13,300 years ago. Even as far north as the city of Troy, the flow of the river changes direction with the tides.

The Hudson River runs through the Munsee, Lenape, Mohican, Mohawk, and Haudenosaunee homelands. Prior to European exploration, the river was known as the Mahicannittuk by the Mohicans, Ka'nón:no by the Mohawks, and Muhheakantuck by the Lenape. The river was subsequently named after Henry Hudson, an Englishman sailing for the Dutch East India Company who explored it in 1609, and after whom Hudson Bay in Canada is also named. It had previously been observed by Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano sailing for King Francis I of France in 1524, as he became the first European known to have entered the Upper New York Bay, but he considered the river to be an estuary. The Dutch called the river the North River, and they called the present-day Delaware River the South River, which formed the spine of the Dutch colony of New Netherland. Settlements of the colony clustered around the Hudson, and its strategic importance as the gateway to the American interior led to years of competition between the English and the Dutch over control of the river and colony.

In the eighteenth century, the river valley and its inhabitants were the subject and inspiration of Washington Irving, the first internationally acclaimed American author. In the nineteenth century, the area inspired the Hudson River School of landscape painting, an American pastoral style, as well as the concepts of environmentalism and wilderness. The Delaware and Hudson Canal connected Port Jervis on the Delaware river to Kingston on the Hudson, creating an inland route for coal from Pennsylvania to New York that bypassed the dangerous coastal route. The Erie Canal, completed in 1825, connected Albany on the Hudson to Buffalo on Lake Ontario and therefore New York to the Great Lakes, becoming an important route for western settlers.

Industrial contamination of the Hudson River grew sharply in the mid-twentienth century, particularly from polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs. Pollution control regulations, enforcement actions, and restoration projects initiated in the late twentieth and twenty-first centuries have begun to improve water quality. Sturgeon have been seen in the Hudson and whales in the New York Bay in the early twenty-first century..

Counties
Hamilton
Essex
Warren
Washington
Saratoga
Albany
Rensselaer
Greene
Columbia
Ulster
Dutchess
Putnam
Orange
Rockland
Westchester
Bronx
Bergen, NJ
Hudson, NJ
New York
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