|
|
|
|
Table 1-13: Inland Waterway Mileage: 2000
(Includes 39 states and the District of Columbia)
Excel | CSV
Alabama |
1,270 |
Alaska |
5,497 |
Arkansas |
1,860 |
California |
286 |
Connecticut |
117 |
Delaware |
99 |
District of Columbia |
7 |
Florida |
1,540 |
Georgia |
721 |
Idaho |
111 |
Illinois |
1,095 |
Indiana |
353 |
Iowa |
492 |
Kansas |
120 |
Kentucky |
1,591 |
Louisiana |
2,823 |
Maine |
73 |
Maryland |
532 |
Massachusetts |
90 |
Minnesota |
258 |
Mississippi |
873 |
Missouri |
1,033 |
Nebraska |
318 |
New Hampshire |
8 |
New Jersey |
360 |
New York |
394 |
North Carolina |
1,152 |
Ohio |
444 |
Oklahoma |
150 |
Oregon |
681 |
Pennsylvania |
259 |
Rhode Island |
39 |
South Carolina |
482 |
South Dakota |
75 |
Tennessee |
946 |
Texas |
834 |
Virginia |
674 |
Washington |
1,057 |
West Virginia |
682 |
Wisconsin |
231 |
NOTES: Waterway mileages were determined by including the length of
channels 1) with a controlling draft of nine feet or greater, 2) with commercial
cargo traffic reported for 1998 and 1999, but 3) were not offshore (i.e., channels
in coastal areas included only the miles from the entrance channel inward).
Channels within major bays are included (e.g., Chesapeake Bay, San Francisco
Bay, Puget Sound, Long Island Sound, major sounds and straits in southeastern
Alaska). Channels in the Great Lakes are not included, but waterways connecting
lakes and the St. Lawrence Seaway inside the United States are included.
SOURCE: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Navigation Data Center, National
Waterway Network, January 2002.
|
|
|
|
|