Big Creek, Kentucky

Big Creek
Physical characteristics
SourceCollins/Couch fork headwaters
 • coordinates37°09′56″N 83°28′19″W / 37.16569°N 83.47195°W / 37.16569; -83.47195 (Collins/Couch fork headwaters)
2nd sourceUpper forks of Old McHenry Fork
 • coordinates37°08′12″N 83°29′31″W / 37.13678°N 83.49189°W / 37.13678; -83.49189 (Upper forks of Old McHenry Fork)
3rd sourceHalls Fork headwaters
 • coordinates37°08′22″N 83°28′05″W / 37.13937°N 83.46807°W / 37.13937; -83.46807 (Halls Fork headwaters)
4th sourceLeft Fork Ulysses Fork headwaters
 • coordinates37°12′02″N 83°30′09″W / 37.20066°N 83.50245°W / 37.20066; -83.50245 (Left Fork Ulysses Fork headwaters)
MouthRed Bird River[1]
 • location
15 miles (24 km) upstream[1]
 • coordinates
37°09′59″N 83°34′56″W / 37.16627°N 83.58214°W / 37.16627; -83.58214 (Big Creek mouth)
 • elevation
789 feet (240 m)[1]

Big Creek is a 4.5 miles (7.2 km) long creek in Kentucky, United States whose headwaters are in Leslie County and that flows into the Red Bird River in Clay County.[2] A postoffice and village are named for it.[2] Its own name is likely purely descriptive of its frequent flooding and high water levels, as it is not otherwise one of the biggest tributaries of Red Bird River.[2]

  1. ^ a b c Hodge 1918, p. 112.
  2. ^ a b c Rennick 2000c, p. 28.