CourseThe Oconee River passes through the Oconee National Forest into Lake Oconee, a manmade lake, near the towns of Madison and Greensboro off Interstate 20. From Lake Oconee, the river travels to Lake Sinclair, another manmade lake in Milledgeville, Georgia, the town founded on Georgia's fall line and former state capital. South of Milledgeville, the river flows unobstructed and later merges with the Ocmulgee River to form the Altamaha River. Along the river there are many sandbars and oxbow lakes while the forest bottomland swamp surrounding the Oconee extends for miles, creating a very remote setting. Name origin"Oconee" means "people/place or nation" ("O") of the "skunk" ("Conee") in Creek Indian language. Many creek and area names in the Southeast beginning with "O" have such names, like the Ocmulgee River, the Ogeechee River, Okahumpka, and so on. River pollutionFecal coliform bacteriaThe main sources of pollution come from fecal coliform bacteria that gets into the river from stormwater runoff on vast farmlands throughout the watershed. This can be deadly to humans if ingested or acquired through an open wound. Eating fish from the Oconee Basin is fine if it is cooked thoroughly. Fertilizer runoffThe second biggest form of pollution in the river is Fertilizer runoff. This is measured by nitrogen parts per million found in collected samples regularly. The nitrogen from the fertilizers do the same thing to algae that it does to land plants: it causes abundant growth. The effect is two-fold:
SedimentationThe third largest source of pollution (?) is sedimentation, typically caused by construction and urbanization. Loose dirt washes away with rainwater, clouding the river and eventually settling to the bottom at a faster rate than the river carries it away naturally. The clarity effects are the same as the algae effect, and the depth changes affect the flow and temperature of the river, stressing the ecosystem. External links
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