Cattaraugus Creek | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | New York |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | Java Lake |
• location | Java, Wyoming County |
• coordinates | 42°37′43″N 78°20′24″W / 42.62861°N 78.34000°W[1] |
Mouth | Lake Erie |
• location | Sunset Bay, Erie County |
• coordinates | 42°34′14″N 79°08′14″W / 42.57056°N 79.13722°W[1] |
Length | 68 mi (109 km)[2] |
Basin size | 559 sq mi (1,450 km2)[2] |
Cattaraugus Creek is a stream, approximately 68 miles (109 km) long, in western New York in the United States.[1][2][3][4] The creek drains a wooded rural portion of western New York southwest of Buffalo into Lake Erie.[2][3][4] In its lower course it flows primarily through the Cattaraugus Reservation of the Seneca tribe.[2][3][4] William Beauchamp identifies the name Cattaraugus as deriving from the Seneca word Gah-ta-ra-ke-ras, meaning "stinking shore" or "foul-smelling river bank."[5] This in turn is likely a loanword from an extinct Attiwandiron, Erie, Wenro, or Wendat (Huron) language, combining the verb root -i'tar-, referring to clay or mud,[6] and -akera(n)-, describing a bad or strong odor:[7] hence, tke'tarakeras, place of strong-smelling mud or clay. (The Seneca language does not have a distinct R sound; the Seneca language equivalent, Canawaugus, was originally used for a site further east.[8]) This name is a result of the natural gas that oozes from the river mud.