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Falling Water River

Falling Water River
River
Middlefalls-long-exp-tn1.jpg
Country United States
State Tennessee
Source Welch Hollow near Monterey
 - elevation 1,640 ft (500 m)
 - coordinates 36°08′48″N 85°16′45″W / 36.14667°N 85.27917°W / 36.14667; -85.27917 
Mouth Center Hill Lake (Caney Fork) northeast of Smithville
 - elevation 646 ft (197 m)
 - coordinates 36°01′01″N 85°41′31″W / 36.01694°N 85.69194°W / 36.01694; -85.69194Coordinates: 36°01′01″N 85°41′31″W / 36.01694°N 85.69194°W / 36.01694; -85.69194 
Length 46.8 mi (75 km)

The Falling Water River is a 46.8-mile-long (75.3 km) stream in the east-central portion of Middle Tennessee in the United States. It rises just west of Monterey at the edge of the Cumberland Plateau, and traverses the Eastern Highland Rim before dropping off to the Nashville Basin and emptying into Center Hill Lake along the Caney Fork. The river is noted for the 136-foot (41 m) Burgess Falls, which it spills over near the end of its course.

The river rises in Welch Hollow, a dissected portion of the Cumberland Plateau that lies just west of Monterey in eastern Putnam County, and descends more than 600 feet (180 m) before exiting the hollow at the southern edge of Buck Mountain. It passes under Interstate 40 near mile marker 291 before entering City Lake, a reservoir that provides water and water treatment for nearby Cookeville. Just beyond the City Lake Dam, the river passes under U.S. Highway 70 as it turns southwestwardly through rural southern Putnam County.

After flowing through a series of sharp bends, the river passes under Tennessee Highway 111 before entering northern White County, winding its way through a rural area to the north and west of the Upper Cumberland Regional Airport. The river again reaches (and forms) the Putnam-White county line before entering Burgess Falls Lake, a reservoir built in the early 1920s to provide electricity for Cookeville. The river passes under State Highway 135 just upstream from the reservoir's dam. Beyond the dam, the river enters a gorge and flows over a series of three waterfalls, culminating in the 136-foot Burgess Falls, as it drops from the Highland Rim to the Nashville Basin.


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