Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7567283> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 62 of
62
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7567283 subject Q17476724.
- Q7567283 subject Q7361816.
- Q7567283 subject Q8664970.
- Q7567283 abstract "The South Fork Kings River is an important tributary of the Kings River in the U.S. state of California. It joins the Middle Fork Kings River to form the main stem of the Kings. It is famous for flowing through Kings Canyon, a 10,000-foot (3,000 m) deep glacial canyon in the heart of Kings Canyon National Park, and Cedar Grove, a valley said by some to resemble world-famous Yosemite Valley farther north in Yosemite National Park.The river is 45 miles (72 km) long and flows south for the first part of its course, then west for the remainder. It drains an area of some 460 square miles (1,200 km2). Important tributaries include Woods and Bubbs Creeks, and the Roaring River. Settlements on the river include Kanawyers and Cedar Grove. State Route 180 follows about 25 miles (40 km) of the lower river.There are plenty of records of Chinook Salmon presence 10–12 miles above Pine Flat before the 1940s and even some after that in Mill Creek in the 1970s. Woodhull and Dill (1942) noted that salmon ascend about 10 to 12 mi beyond the present upper extent of the reservoir and salmon migration in the Kings River probably ascended no farther than the confluence of the North Fork. Yoshiyama and Moyle also noted that there is an undocumented note of “a few salmon” having occurred much farther upstream at Cedar Grove (28 mi above present-day Pine Flat Reservoir) in the past.As of 2012 the California Department of Fish and Game fish data base from their surveys indicate that only rainbow trout, brown trout and Sacramento sucker are found in the South Fork Kings River. However, "it will be necessary to thoroughly evaluate the genetics of all suspected non-hybridized stocks of California golden trout and conduct a thorough search of the upper Kern River, South Fork Kings River and other basins to find all available genetically uncontaminated populations, in order to assure a non-hybridized, yet appropriately broad California golden trout gene pool within the new habitats." This is because "... many of the waters in the headwaters of the South Fork Kings River and several tributary streams and lakes were also planted with California golden trout from GTC (Golden Trout Creek) between 1909 and 1914. Sam Ellis, one of the CDFG employees responsible for many trout transplants from GTC, kept a map of 1870 to 1915 trout transplants from GTC to waters elsewhere in the southern Sierra Nevada. Information on the map shows locations, dates and species of trout planted in the southern Sierra Nevada. Based on this map, information from other sources (Ellis 1915; Ellis and Bryant 1920)..."".
- Q7567283 country Q30.
- Q7567283 discharge "18.575851365008".
- Q7567283 length "72420.48".
- Q7567283 maximumDischarge "393.6041676427".
- Q7567283 minimumDischarge "1.7584761734253".
- Q7567283 mouthElevation "687.9336".
- Q7567283 mouthMountain Q936623.
- Q7567283 mouthPlace Q936623.
- Q7567283 riverMouth Q1264687.
- Q7567283 sourceElevation "3764.8896".
- Q7567283 sourceMountain Q26777.
- Q7567283 sourcePlace Q26777.
- Q7567283 state Q99.
- Q7567283 thumbnail Kings_Canyon_National_Park_-_Kings_River_near_Zumwalt_Meadow.JPG?width=300.
- Q7567283 watershed "1.19139453075456E9".
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q1264687.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q17476724.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q180402.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q1890940.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q1996389.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q26777.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q35657.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q5056694.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q6360839.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q6841416.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q7055403.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q7361816.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q758177.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q8664970.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q936623.
- Q7567283 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q7567283 dischargeImperial "656".
- Q7567283 dischargeMaxImperial "13900".
- Q7567283 dischargeMinImperial "62.1".
- Q7567283 lengthImperial "45".
- Q7567283 mouth Q1264687.
- Q7567283 mouthElevationImperial "2257".
- Q7567283 mouthLocation "Kings Canyon".
- Q7567283 name "South Fork Kings River".
- Q7567283 sourceElevationImperial "12352".
- Q7567283 sourceLocation Q26777.
- Q7567283 watershedImperial "460".
- Q7567283 type BodyOfWater.
- Q7567283 type Place.
- Q7567283 type RiverBodyOfWater.
- Q7567283 type BodyOfWater.
- Q7567283 type Location.
- Q7567283 type NaturalPlace.
- Q7567283 type Place.
- Q7567283 type River.
- Q7567283 type Stream.
- Q7567283 type Thing.
- Q7567283 type Q4022.
- Q7567283 type Q47521.
- Q7567283 comment "The South Fork Kings River is an important tributary of the Kings River in the U.S. state of California. It joins the Middle Fork Kings River to form the main stem of the Kings.".
- Q7567283 label "South Fork Kings River".
- Q7567283 depiction Kings_Canyon_National_Park_-_Kings_River_near_Zumwalt_Meadow.JPG.
- Q7567283 name "South Fork Kings River".