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Tioughnioga River

Tioughnioga River (Ti-ough'-ni'-o-ga)
Tiohujodha, Onondaga
River
Country United States
State New York
County Cortland, Broome County, New York
Source East Branch Tioughnioga, West Branch Tioughnioga
 - location Cortland, New York
 - coordinates 42°36′15″N 76°09′32″W / 42.60417°N 76.15889°W / 42.60417; -76.15889
Mouth Chenango River
 - location Chenango Forks, New York
 - elevation 879 ft (268 m)
 - coordinates 42°14′12″N 75°50′35″W / 42.23667°N 75.84306°W / 42.23667; -75.84306Coordinates: 42°14′12″N 75°50′35″W / 42.23667°N 75.84306°W / 42.23667; -75.84306
Length 34 mi (55 km)

The Tioughnioga River/t.əˈnɡə/ is a 34.2-mile-long (55.0 km)tributary of the Chenango River in central New York in the United States. It drains a dissected plateau area east of the Finger Lakes at the northernmost edge of the watershed of the Susquehanna River.

The name comes from a native word for "forks of the river" or "meeting of waters". The river was also called "Tiohujodha" by the Moravians. At one time it was called the Onondaga, as leading to that town, and Teyoghagoga was another early form.

It rises in two branches in upstate New York southeast of Syracuse, with the East Branch sometimes regarded as the main branch. The West Branch, 15.6 miles (25.1 km) long, issues from Tully Lake, approximately 2 miles (3 km) south of Tully on the Onondaga-Cortland county line, and flows south.

The Tully Valley is a preglacial valley of a northward flowing river that flowed into the Ontarian River (preglacial Lake Ontario). Near Tully, during the glacial retreat, the valley was dammed by ice to form a lake. For a period of time the retreating of the front by melting matched the forward movement of the glacier, so that the captured rock, gravel and sand was deposited into the lake. This huge quantity of material approximately half filled the valley, and reversed the flow direction to the southward. It left enormous quantities of gravel from Tully to Cortland, some of which was used as building material for Interstate 81. The gravel also forms a major aquifer for the area. Tully Lake is a glacial kettle, being formed by a large chunk of ice that was buried in the glacial debris. As the ice melted the land collapsed, causing a lake to form.


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