• Canoeing on the Buffalo

    Buffalo

    National River Arkansas

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  • Buffalo National River Announce Limits in Vistor Services

    As Buffalo National River anticipates the beginning of another season of floaters, hikers, and other visitors, things have altered to an extent where many things perhaps taken for granted in the past will be absent or at least altered. More »

  • Road Construction

    CAUTION!! Road construction will begin in Boxley Valley on Monday, April 22, 2013. Parking areas for wildlife viewing will be installed to alleviate congestion and increase safety during high traffic periods. Construction may last 180 days. More »

Rivers and Streams

Nature and Science

Boston Mountain creek.

Faron D. Usrey.

The Ozark Mountains as a whole, can be described as an northward tilted, uplifted plateau that has been dissected by the erosional effects of water resulting in tree-branch shaped watersheds.
Within the Ozark Mountains three major ecoregions have been described: the Boston Mountains, Springfield Plateau, and the Salem Plateau. The watershed of the Buffalo River is a mixture of the Boston Mountains in the upper river and the Springfield Plateau in the lower river.
As the erosional processes act upon the surface of these geologic ecoregions, distinct stream morphologies result. The Boston Mountains are higher in elevation and composed of more weather resistant rock, and thus have produced high gradient streams with large car-sized boulders confining large reaches of the headwaters. The Springfield Plateau streams are quite different. They are medium gradient streams that have substrate composed primarily of cobble and gravel which periodically come in contact with the limestone bedrock of the Boone Formation. The streams of the Salem Plateau are generally more bedrock controlled than that of the Springfield.
Differences in stream morphology can effect the diversity and composition of macroinvertebrates and fish, the basic chemistry of the water, and the response of the stream system to disturbance.
The Buffalo River is unique in that its headwaters are located in the Boston Mountains and flows north into the Springfield Plateau. Once it intersects the Springfield the river turns east and flows between the boundary of the two geologic provinces.

Did You Know?

The front of the Tyler Bend Visitor Center.

Did you know that the Tyler Bend Visitor Center is a great place to receive information about Buffalo National River? The center offers exhibits, books, films, and park information.