Hahaha! California actually has lot of pretty tall mountains that get regular annual snowfall so I'm assuming that's responsible for quite a few of them. Also, contrary to popular belief it DOES rain there occasionally (most during January and February), but when it does, it's often heavy enough to cause flash flooding, especially in the desert. I'm wiling to bet most of the waterfalls there are probably seasonal.
Yeah, Northern CAā€™s climate is closer to Oregonā€™s and SoCal is more like Mexico. Or at least itā€™s supposed to be. Last year it dumped pretty hard from Dec to March in the Bay Area.
the water crisis is largely in chunk, due to the agriculture taking up like 95% of it, as california by far is the largest state in the U.S in terms of crop export and it happens to also be the one producing the most water intensive ones (alfalfa(used as food for cows internationally), several nuts and avocados)
yeah and I could have just looked up all the info and not used this but the only reason I gave it some thought was someone thought it was interesting enough to post and presumably receive feedback.
There's a place on the Blackwater River I have marked. So far I've traced 7 waterfalls trekking uphill from the water side. But I can hear more in the distance!
"Both states were not included in the larger dataset. Number of watefalls is likely higher than depicted." in reference to Alaska and Hawaii. It might not have been super visible to some people.
As a geography nerd I don't think we have the capabilities to actually count every single waterfall in Alaska. Alaska is still true wilderness and it is massive
You're correct, by a large margin. WV has 275 according to Wikipedia. Now I'm wondering what qualifier was used, was it drop height, discharge, accessible vs inaccessible...
Here in Washington it's hard to imagine waterfalls even being noteworthy. We've got way too many mountains and way too much precipitation. We're lousy with waterfalls. The whole fuckin state is a goddamned waterfall.
For instances like Rhode Island (5) and Florida (4), the map groups them in the same range, even though Florida is far larger than Rhode Island. I wonder how it would change the map to have the scales be determined by density, like waterfalls/km^2.
If could have used a few more colors for in-between ranges but I think as-is, it does a decent job of dividing the country evenly between the two blues in the middle.