Everything about Grand River South Dakota totally explained
The
Grand River is a tributary of the
Missouri River in
North Dakota and
South Dakota in the
United States. The length of the combined branch is 110 mi (177 km). With its longest fork, its length is approximately 200 mi (320 km).
It is formed by the confluence of the
North Fork (which rises in North Dakota) and the longer
South Fork (which rises in South Dakota) in northwestern South Dakota near
Shadehill in
Perkins County, near several parcels of the
Grand River National Grassland. It flows east, through the
Standing Rock Indian Reservation and joins the Missouri in
Lake Oahe, approximately 10 mi (16 km) northwest of
Mobridge. The lower 15 mi (25 km) of the river form an arm of the Lake Oahe reservoir.
The forks of the Grand was the site of the famous
1823 attack by a
grizzly bear on frontiersman
Hugh Glass.
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