Clarks River
Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Use American English Template:More citations needed The Clarks River, named for William Clark of the 1804-1806 Lewis and Clark Expedition, is a Template:Convert<ref name="NHD">U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map Template:Webarchive, accessed June 8, 2011</ref> tributary of the Tennessee River in the Jackson Purchase region of western Kentucky.<ref>Template:GNIS</ref> Below the West Fork Clarks River, the river has a mean annual discharge of 368 cubic feet per second. This figure is obtained by combining the average discharge of the Clarks River at Benton,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the average discharge of the West Fork at Brewers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Two forks
For the greater part of its length, it consists of two parallel forks of approximately equal size, the East Fork and the West Fork. The East Fork, shown on federal maps as the main stem of the river, begins south of Murray near the community of Puryear in Henry County, Tennessee and is paralleled by the Paducah, Tennessee and Alabama Railroad. The West Fork begins about Template:Convert west of Murray near the intersection of Jones-Sparkman and Butterworth Roads in Calloway County and flows through Kaler and Symsonia in Graves County before joining with the East Fork at Oaks Station in McCracken County.
Artifacts
The Clarks River streams from Murray in Calloway County through Benton in Marshall County and ends in Paducah (McCracken County), where the mouth of the river intersects with the Tennessee River just before the Tennessee River joins the Ohio River. This river is full of wildlife including the venomous water moccasin snake. Documented evidence states that many Native American encampments and Indian tribes camped and lived along its banks. To this day artifacts have been found including spearheads, arrowheads and pottery.Template:Citation needed
The river is the namesake of Clarks River Road in Paducah.