List of rivers of Florida
This is a list of streams and rivers in the U.S. state of Florida. With one exception, the streams and rivers of Florida all originate on the Coastal plain. That exception is the Apalachicola River, which is formed by the merger of the Chattahoochee River, which originates in the Appalachian Mountains, and the Flint River, which originates in the Piedmont. Most streams and rivers in Florida start from swamps, while some originate from springs or lakes. Many of the streams and rivers are underground for part of their courses. The Everglades, sometimes called the "river of grass", is a very wide and shallow river that originates from Lake Okeechobee. Most of Florida's streams and rivers drain into the Gulf of Mexico. Drainage on the east coast of Florida is dominated by the St. Johns River, which, with the swamps that form its headwaters, extends parallel to the coast from inland of Fort Pierce to Jacksonville.[1]
By drainage basin[]
Atlantic coast[]
Rivers are listed as they enter the ocean from north to south. Tributaries are listed as they enter their main stem from downstream to upstream.
- St. Marys River
-
-
- St. Johns River – Juniper Springs, Salt Springs, Silver Glen Springs, Alexander Springs, Blue Spring, Beecher Spring
- Sisters Creek
- Trout River
-
- Doctors Lake
- Julington Creek
- Black Creek
- North Fork Black Creek
- Lake Kingsley
- Yellow Water Creek
- South Fork Black Creek
- North Fork Black Creek
- Rice Creek
- Dunns Creek
- Ocklawaha River
- Orange Creek
- Little Orange Creek
- Orange Lake
- Cross Creek
- Lochloosa Lake
- Prairie Creek-Camp Canal-River Styx
- Newnans Lake
- Cross Creek
- Silver River
- Lake Griffin
- Yale Canal
- Lake Yale
-
- Lake Eustis
- Dora Canal
- Lake Dora
- Lake Beauclair
- Apopka-Beauclair Canal
- Lake Beauclair
- Lake Dora
- Dead River
- Lake Harris
- Dora Canal
- Lake Eustis
- Orange Creek
- Hontoon Dead River
- Wekiva River – Wekiwa Springs
- Blackwater Creek
- Little Wekiva River
- Lake Jesup
- Econlockhatchee River
- Matanzas River
- Halifax River
- Tomoka River
- Indian River
- Banana River
- Eau Gallie River
- Crane Creek
- Turkey Creek
- Saint Sebastian River
- St. Lucie River
- Loxahatchee River
-
- New River (Broward County)
- Oleta River
- Little River
- Miami River
- Snapper Creek
Alachua Sink[]
Water enters Paynes Prairie Basin from a number of sources. Historically it drained only into Alachua Sink. Water entering the Alachua Sink flows into the Floridan aquifer.[2] (Various sources stating that water entering the Alachua Sink flows to the Santa Fe River may be based on a story told by a Seminole guide to a white explorer in 1823, that a Seminole who had drowned in the sink was later found in the river.[3]) In 1927, Camps Canal was built, which linked the basin to the Orange Lake through the River Styx and ultimately to the Atlantic Ocean.
- Bivens Arm
- Tumbling Creek
- Little Tumbling Creek
- Sweetwater Branch
- Prairie Creek
- Newnans Lake
- Hatchet Creek
- Lake Forest Creek
- Little Hatchet Creek
- Newnans Lake
- Chacala Run
- Chacala Pond
- Sawgrass Run
- Sawgrass Pond
- Lake Wauburg
- Georges Pond
- Burnt Pond
- Georges Pond
- Lake Wauburg
- Sawgrass Pond
- Sawgrass Run
- Chacala Pond
- Dog Branch
Lake Okeechobee[]
Lake Okeechobee drains into the Atlantic Ocean via the St. Lucie River, the , the Hillsboro Canal, the , and the Miami Canal, and into the Gulf of Mexico via the which connects to the head of the Caloosahatchee River. The major input of water into Lake Okeechobee comes from the north, via the Kissimmee River. Rivers are listed as they enter Lake Okeechobee from west to east. Tributaries are listed as they enter their main stem from downstream to upstream.
- Fisheating Creek
-
- Lake Istokpoga
- Kissimmee River[4][5]
-
- Lake Istokpoga
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-
- Lake Kissimmee
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-
-
- Reedy Creek
-
-
-
- Lake Tohopekaliga
- Shingle Creek
-
- East Lake Tohopekaliga
- East Lake Tohopekaliga
-
- Shingle Creek
- Lake Tohopekaliga
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-
-
-
-
Gulf coast[]
Rivers are listed as they enter the gulf from south to north, then west. Tributaries are listed as they enter their main stem from downstream to upstream.
- Shark River
- Harney River
- Lostmans River
- Lopez River
- in Collier County
- Imperial River
- Estero River
- Caloosahatchee River
- Billy Creek
- Orange River
- Peace River
- Myakka River
- Manatee River
- Little Manatee River
- Alafia River – Buckhorn Spring, Lithia Springs
- Palm River
- Hillsborough River – Crystal Springs
- New River in Pasco County
- Anclote River
- Pithlachascotee River
- Weeki Wachee River – Weeki Wachee Springs
- Chassahowitzka River
- Homosassa River – Homosassa Springs
- Crystal River
- Withlacoochee River (central Florida)
- Rainbow River – Rainbow Springs
- Little Withlacoochee River
- Waccasassa River
- Suwannee River – Suwannee Springs, Hart Springs, Ginnie Springs, Fanning Springs, Manatee Springs, Otter Springs, Troy Springs
- Santa Fe River
- Ichetucknee River – Ichetucknee Springs
- New River
- Withlacoochee River (north Florida) – Madison Blue Springs
- Alapaha River – Alapaha Rise Spring
- Santa Fe River
- Steinhatchee River
- Fenholloway River
- Econfina River
- Aucilla River – Nutall Rise
- Wacissa River – , Aucilla Spring,
- Pinhook River
- St. Marks River – St. Marks Spring
- Ochlockonee River
- Crooked River
- Carrabelle River
- Apalachicola River
- Jackson River
- Chipola River – Baltzell Spring, Blue Hole Spring
- Chattahoochee River
- Econfina Creek
- Choctawhatchee River – Vortex Spring
- Pea River
- East Bay River
- Yellow River
- Blackwater River
- Escambia River
- Perdido River
Alphabetically[]
- Alafia River
- Alapaha River
- Alapahoochee River
- Anclote River
- Apalachicola River
- Aucilla River
- Banana River
- Billy Creek
- Black Creek
- Blackwater River
- Braden River
- Caloosahatchee River
- Carrabelle River
- Chassahowitzka River
- Chattahoochee River
- Chipola River
- Choctawhatchee River
- Crane Creek
- Crooked River
- Cross Creek
- Crystal River
- Dead River (Lake County, Florida)
- Doctors Lake
- Dunns Creek
- East Bay River
- East River
- Eau Gallie River
- Econfina Creek
- Econfina River
- Econlockhatchee River
- Elbow Creek
- Escambia River
- Estero River
- Fenholloway River
- Fisheating Creek
- Halifax River
- Harney River
- Hillsborough River
- Homosassa River
- Hontoon Dead River
- Ichetucknee River
- Imperial River
- Indian River
- Jackson River
- Julington Creek
- Kissimmee River
- Lake Jesup
- Little Econlockhatchee River
- Little Manatee River
- Little River (Biscayne Bay)
- Little River (Ochlockonee River tributary)
- Little Wekiva River
- Little Withlacoochee River
- Lopez River
- Lostmans River
- Loxahatchee River
- Manatee River
- Matanzas River
- Miami River
- Myakka River
- Myakkahatchee Creek
- New River (Broward County)
- (Collier County)
- New River (Franklin County)
- New River (Pasco County)
- New River (Union/Bradford County)
- Ochlockonee River
- Ocklawaha River
- Oleta River
- Orange Creek
- Orange River
- Palatlakaha River
- Palm River
- Pea River
- Peace River
- Perdido River
- Pinhook River
- Pithlachascotee River
- Pottsburg Creek
- Rainbow River
- Reedy Creek
- Ribault River
- Saint Sebastian River
- Santa Fe River
- Shark River
- Shingle Creek
- Shoal River
- Sopchoppy River
- St. Johns River
- St. Lucie River
- St. Marks River
- St. Marys River
- Steinhatchee River
- Suwannee River
- Telogia Creek
- Tolomato River
- Tomoka River
- Trout River
- Turkey Creek
- Waccasassa River
- Wacissa River
- Wakulla River
- Weeki Wachee River
- Wekiva River (Gulf Hammock)
- Wekiva River
- Withlacoochee River (central Florida)
- Withlacoochee River (north Florida)
- Yellow River
See also[]
- Geology of Florida
- List of rivers in the United States
- List of springs in Florida
- Outstanding Florida Waters
References[]
- ^ Clewell, Andre F. (1991). "Physical Environment". In Livingston, Robert J. (ed.). The Rivers of Florida. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 17–18. ISBN 0-387-97363-X.
- ^ "Orange Creek Basin". Saint Johns River Water Management District. Retrieved 2021-09-03.
- ^ Meindl, Christopher (1996). "View of Paynes Prairie: Biography of a Wetland". The Florida Geographer. p. 57. Retrieved 2021-09-03 – via FAU Digital Library.
- ^ "Kissimmee Upper Basin" (PDF). South Florida Water Management District. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
- ^ "Kissimmee Lower Basin" (PDF). South Florida Water Management District. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
- Fernald, Edward A., Ed. 1981. Drainage Basins and Divides. Atlas of Florida. Tallahassee, Florida: The Florida State University Foundation, Inc. p. 18. ISBN 0-9606708-0-7
External links[]
- Lists of rivers of the United States by state
- Rivers of Florida
- Lists of landforms of Florida