
Penobscot River
Data:
Length: 240 miles
(West Branch to Bucksport)
Drainage area: 8,570
square miles
Discharge at mouth: 10.1
billion gallons/day (avg.)
Rivers, Lakes, and
Streams in the Penobscot Watershed:
Alamoosook Lake
Abacontnetic Stream
Alder Brook
Allagash Stream
Baker Brook
Big Stream Brook
Birch Stream
Black Stream
Blackman Stream
Brayley Brook
Brewer Lake
Chemo Pond
Caucomgomoc Stream
Cold Stream
Cold Stream Pond
Davidson Brook
Dead Stream
Dolby Pond
Dole Brook
Dole Pond
Ebhorse Stream
Ellis Brook
Elm Stream
French Stream
Great Works Stream
Gulliver Brook
Hay Brook
Hemlock Stream
Hoyt Brook
Hudson Brook
Hurricane Brook
Johnston Brook
Katahdin Brook
Kenduskeag Stream
Kidney Brook
Little Lake Brook
Little Nesowandnehunk Stream
Margascal Stream
Marsh Stream
Mattamiscontis Stream
Mattawamkeag River
Medunkeunk Stream
Millinocket Stream
Mud Brook
Nesowadnehunk Stream
Nicatous Lake
Norris Brook
Nulheadus Stream
Olamon Stream
Orland River
Passadumkeag river
Penobscot Brook
Pine Stream
Piscataquis River
Pushaw Lake
Ragged Stream
Ragmuff Stream
Rainey Brook
Red Brook
Ripogenous Stream
Roberts Brook
Russell Stream
Salmon Stream
Sam Ayers Stream
Sawtelle Brook
Sebois River
Shin Brook
Silver Lake
Stratton Brook
Sunhaze Stream
Swift Brook
Telos Brook
Toddy's Pond
Trout Brook
Wadleigh Stream
Wassataquoik Stream
West Lake
Wyman Brook
Maine Water Profiles
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Penobscot
Watershed
The Penobscot River was named by native peoples, who have occupied
the Penobscot Valley for well over 5,000 years. The word means "waters
of descending ledge."
New England's
second largest river
system, the Penobscot drains an area
of 8,570 square miles. Its West Branch
rises near Penobscot Lake on the Maine/Quebec
border; the East Branch at East Branch
Pond near the headwaters of the Allagash
River. The main stem empties into Penobscot
Bay near the town of Bucksport.

Ripogenus Gorge - West Branch of the Penobscot
The river is tidal from the base of the Veazie
Dam to its mouth near Bucksport (approx. 25 miles) and is brackish
to the town of Hampden. The river's total fall from Penobscot Lake
on the South Branch is 1,602 feet.
During the nineteenth century,
the Penobscot became the primary means of transporting logs out
of the North Woods to Bangor--then called the "timber capital
of the world" (see photos and read more about the log drives).
The river's West Branch from
Ripogenus Dam to the Pemadumcook Lakes is famous for its numerous
falls and rapids which provide outstanding whitewater rafting
and angling for wild landlocked Atlantic salmon.
Like all of New England's major
rivers, the Penobscot has been grossly polluted with untreated
industrial and municipal waste for most of the 20th century.
Water quality on the main-stem and lower tributaries has improved
markedly since the 1970s.
Terrain ranges from steep mountains including
Maine's highest, Mt.Katahdin, rolling hills and extensive bogs,
marshes and wooded swamps.
Most of the watershed is forested, intensively
harvested for pulp and saw logs and sparsely settled. The only
major urban area in the watershed is the riverfront cities of
Bangor and Brewer.
A major agricultural area (dairy
and potato farming) is concentrated in the Kenduskeag Stream
watershed west of Bangor with smaller areas located in intervales
of the lower Piscataquis River. Paper mills are located on West
Branch at Millinocket and East Millinocket, and on the main-stem
at Lincoln, Old Town, Brewer and Bucksport.
The Penobscot is
home to many fish, including native brook trout, landlocked salmon,
smallmouth bass, white perch and chain pickerel are prevalent
resident species. Sea-run species include Atlantic salmon, alewives,
American shad, American eel, sea lamprey, striped bass, tomcod,
rainbow smelt and occasional Atlantic sturgeon.
Most sea-run species except
smelt and eels are found in numbers far below historic levels
because of non-existent or inadequate fish passage facilities
on main-stem and tributaries, past pollution and loss of habitat
due to dam construction.
The Penobscot is best known for
its large historic salmon run (50,000 or more adults) and its
much smaller contemporary run, which is the largest Atlantic
salmon run remaining in the United States (1,000-4,000 adults
in recent decades).
Local
Organizations
Penobscot
Watersheds
info@coastalmountains.org
http://www.coastalmountains.org
Prk2000pen@aol.com
www.bairnet.org/organizations/riverkeepers
1168 Main St.
Old Town, ME 04468
207-827-6138
info@sunkhaze.org
http://www.sunkhaze.org
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