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Temescal Creek (California)
Temescal Creek may refer to: * Temescal Creek (Northern California) * Temescal Creek, San Diego County, tributary of San Dieguito River * Temescal Creek (Riverside County), tributary of the Santa Ana River See also * Temescal Creek, stream through Temescal Canyon, Los Angeles County {{geodis ...
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Temescal Creek (Northern California)
Temescal Creek (''Temescal'', Mexican Spanish for "sweat lodge", is one of the principal watercourses in the city of Oakland, California, United States. The word "temescal" is derived from ''temescalli/temazcalli'' (variously transliterated), which means " sweat house" in the Nahuatl language of Mexico. The name was given to the creek when it became part of the Peralta's Rancho San Antonio. It is surmised that the Peraltas or perhaps one of their ranch hands (vaquero The ''vaquero'' (; pt, vaqueiro, , ) is a horse-mounted livestock herder of a tradition that has its roots in the Iberian Peninsula and extensively developed in Mexico from a methodology brought to Latin America from Spain. The vaquero became t ...s) had seen local indigenous (Ohlone) structures along the creek similar to those in other parts of New Spain which were called ''temescalli'' or "temazcalli". Three forks begin in the Berkeley Hills in the northeastern section of Oakland (also referred to as the Oaklan ...
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Temescal Creek, San Diego County
''Temescal'', ''Temascal'' and ''Temazcal'' are all forms of the Nahuatl word which refers to a type of sweat lodge used by indigenous Mesoamericans. Temescal, Temascal, or Temazcal might also refer to: Mexico * Temascal, Oaxaca * Temazcal Limestone United States Alameda County, California * Temescal, Oakland, California, a neighborhood * Temescal Creek (Northern California) * Lake Temescal * Temescal Regional Park, the park surrounding Lake Temescal. Los Angeles & Ventura Counties, California * Rancho Temescal * Temescal Canyon, Los Angeles County Riverside County, California * Rancho Temescal (Serrano) * Temescal Canyon * Temescal Canyon High School (Lake Elsinore, California) * Temescal Creek (Riverside County) * Temescal Freeway, a name for California State Route 71 * Temescal Mountains * Temescal Valley (California), a valley * Temescal Valley, California Temescal Valley (''Temescal'', Spanish for "sweat lodge") is a census-designated place in Riverside Cou ...
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San Dieguito River
The San Dieguito River is a major river in Southern California, United States. Its headwaters rise on the southern slope of the Volcan Mountains in San Diego County and the river flows generally southwest for ,U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map accessed March 16, 2011 draining before emptying into the Pacific Ocean north of San Diego. Course The river officially begins at the confluence of two streams, Santa Ysabel Creek and Santa Maria Creek, near the town of San Pasqual. Santa Ysabel Creek rises in the northeastern corner of the San Dieguito River watershed and flows west, creating Lake Sutherland. It then flows out of the lake's dam and westwards for the rest of its course. Its total length is about . Santa Maria Creek, the smaller of the two streams, begins near the city of Ramona and flows northwards about through the Ramona Grasslands and Bandy Canyon. A third fork, Temescal Creek, rises in the Cleveland Na ...
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Temescal Creek (Riverside County)
Temescal Creek (shown on federal maps as Temescal Wash) is an approximately U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map accessed March 16, 2011 watercourse in Riverside County, in the U.S. state of California. Flowing primarily in a northwestern direction, it connects Lake Elsinore with the Santa Ana River. It drains the eastern slopes of the Santa Ana Mountains on its left and on its right the western slopes of the Temescal Mountains along its length. With a drainage basin of about , it is the largest tributary of the Santa Ana River, hydrologically connecting the San Jacinto River and Lake Elsinore watersheds to the rest of the Santa Ana watershed. However, flowing through an arid rain shadow zone of the Santa Ana Mountains, and with diversion of ground water for human use, the creek today is ephemeral for most of its length, except for runoff from housing developments and agricultural return flows. History Prior to 1886 ...
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