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Alabama and River's
According to custom, Middle Tennessee consists of that portion of the state east of the Tennessee River's western crossing of the state ( in which it flows northward back into Tennessee after having flowed through northern Alabama ) and west of the dividing line between the Eastern and Central time zones.
Around 90 % of the Coosa River's length is located in Alabama.

Alabama and main
* 20px Interstate 10 is the main interstate highway through Swuannee County, running west and east through the panhandle from Alabama to Jacksonville.
In the field of college and university education, Birmingham has been the location of the University of Alabama School of Medicine ( formerly known as the Medical College of Alabama ) and the University of Alabama School of Dentistry since 1947, and since that time, it has also become provided with the University of Alabama at Birmingham ( founded circa 1969 ), one of three main campuses of the University of Alabama, and also with the private Birmingham-Southern College.
Also, traffic along the main highway artery Alabama State Route 79 has risen and the road has become increasingly dangerous between the termination of a divided highway four lane just north of Pinson and Locust Fork.
Alabama Southern is a state-supported, fully accredited, comprehensive two-year college serving southwest Alabama with its main campuses in Monroeville and Thomasville.
The city serves as the main transportation and commercial hub for a significant part of southeastern Alabama, southwest Georgia, and nearby portions of the Florida Panhandle.
Before Interstate 65 was constructed, the main route between Nashville, Tennessee and Birmingham, Alabama was U. S. Route 31.
Alabama Southern is a state-supported, fully accredited, comprehensive two-year college serving southwest Alabama with its main campuses in Monroeville and Thomasville.
Gulf County's highway transportation needs are met with three main corridors: U. S. Route 98 along the coast and through Port St. Joe providing a route west to Panama City, Florida and east to Apalachicola, Florida, State Road 22 westward from Wewahitchka, Florida to Panama City, Florida, and State Road 71 from Port St. Joe northward toward Alabama and Georgia.
There are two main types of rock exposed at Alabama Hills.
Dozens of natural arches are among the main attractions at the Alabama Hills.
In the 1982 Alabama gubernatorial Democratic primary, Wallace's main opponents were Lieutenant Governor George McMillan and Alabama House Speaker Joe McCorquodale.
In areas more distant from the main theaters of operations, Confederate forces in Alabama and Mississippi under Lieutenant General Richard Taylor, in Arkansas under Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson, in Louisiana and Texas under General E. Kirby Smith and in Indian Territory under Brigadier General Stand Watie surrendered on May 4, 1865, May 12, 1865, May 26, 1865 ( officially June 2, 1865 ) and June 28, 1865, respectively.
In addition to the main campus at Fort Leavenworth, the college has satellite campuses at Fort Belvoir, Virginia ; Fort Lee, Virginia ; Fort Gordon, Georgia ; and Redstone Arsenal, Alabama.
The Piedmont is a plateau region located in the eastern United States between the Atlantic Coastal Plain and the main Appalachian Mountains, stretching from New Jersey in the north to central Alabama in the south.
Each level has two main halls, still called Upper and Lower Alabama and Pryor Streets.
Walden Ridge and Sand Mountain are separated from the main portion of the Cumberland Plateau by the Sequatchie Valley, which extends into central Alabama under other names.

Alabama and tributary
After the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers, the principal tributary of the Alabama is the Cahaba River, which is about long and joins the Alabama River about below Selma.
To be more precise, the Coosa River and the Tallapoosa River flow together at Wetumpka, Alabama, to form the Alabama River, and then the Cahaba River is a tributary to that one farther to the west.
* The Duck River ( Alabama ), a tributary of the Mulberry Fork of the Black Warrior River
The Tombigbee River is a tributary of the Mobile River, approximately 200 mi ( 325 km ) long, in the U. S. states of Mississippi and Alabama.
The British divided the new territory into West Florida and East Florida at the Apalachicola River ( whose main tributary, the Chattahoochee River, forms a large portion of the present boundary between Alabama and Georgia, and a small part of the Florida / Georgia boundary ).
Mulberry Fork is a tributary of the Black Warrior River, long, in the U. S. state of Alabama.
* Raccoon Creek, a tributary of the Coosa River in Alabama
The Elk River is a tributary of the Tennessee River in the U. S. states of Tennessee and Alabama.
The Cahaba River is a major tributary of the Alabama River and part of the larger Mobile River Basin.
The Coosa River is a tributary of the Alabama River in the U. S. states of Alabama and Georgia.
* Dog River ( Alabama ), a river in the U. S. state of Alabama, tributary of Mobile Bay
All permanent and intermittent streams in Lauderdale County, Alabama, with flowing water from December to June ; tributary to Cypress Creek and its tributaries upstream from the junction of Burcham Creek, including Burcham Creek, excluding Threet Creek and its tributaries in Wayne County, Tennessee ; all permanent and intermittent streams with flowing water from December to June, tributary to Cypress and Middle Cypress Creek drainage, Lawrence County, Buffalo River and its tributaries, are critical habitat.
The Buttahatchee River is a tributary of the Tombigbee River, about long, in northwestern Alabama and northeastern Mississippi in the United States.
The Buttahatchee River rises in northwestern Winston County, Alabama, near the town of Delmar, and flows generally westwardly through Marion County, where it collects a short tributary, the West Branch Buttahatchee River.

Alabama and Coosa
In the Coastal Plain are the Tombigbee River in the west, the Alabama River ( formed by the Coosa and Tallapoosa ) in the western central, and in the east the Chattahoochee River, which forms almost half of the Georgia boundary.
The Alabama River, in the U. S. state of Alabama, is formed by the Tallapoosa and Coosa rivers, which unite about north of Montgomery.
The Alabama, Coosa, and Tallapoosa rivers were central to the homeland of the Creek Indians before their removal by United States forces to the Indian Territory in the 1830s. In 1712 the Alabama River was descovered.
It has now been determined that the " Spotted Bass " found in the Tallapoosa and Coosa Rivers, and their lakes, are a new species, now known as the " Alabama Bass ".
Landlocked stripers have a hard time reproducing naturally, and one of the few and most successful rivers they have been documented reproducing successfully is the Coosa River in Alabama and Georgia.
The Muscogee were a confederacy of tribes consisting of Yuchi, Koasati, Alabama, Coosa, Tuskeegee, Coweta, Cusseta, Chehaw ( Chiaha ), Hitchiti, Tuckabatchee, Oakfuskee, and many others.
The Upper Towns, located on the Coosa, Tallapoosa and Alabama rivers, were Tuckabatchee, Abhika, Coosa ( Kusa ; the dominant people of East Tennessee and North Georgia during the Spanish explorations ), Itawa ( original inhabitants of the Etowah Indian Mounds ), Hothliwahi ( Ullibahali ), Hilibi, Eufaula, Wakokai, Atasi, Alibamu, Coushatta ( Koasati ; they had absorbed the Kaski / Casqui and the Tali ), and Tuskegee (" Napochi " in the de Luna chronicles ).
French Canadian explorers founded Mobile as the first capital of Louisiana in 1702, and took advantage of the war to build Fort Toulouse at the confluence of the Tallapoosa and Coosa in 1717, trading with the Alabama and Coushatta.
Downtown Montgomery lies along the southern bank of the Alabama River, about downstream from the confluence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers.
* Coosa County, Alabama – southwest
Coosa County is a county of the U. S. state of Alabama.
Annette Jones Watters of the University of Alabama's Alabama State Data Center cited Coosa as one of eight counties to lose greater than 6 % of its population from 2000 to early 2007.
* National Register of Historic Places listings in Coosa County, Alabama
* Properties on the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage in Coosa County, Alabama
id: County Coosa, Alabama
pl: Hrabstwo Coosa ( Alabama )
simple: Coosa County, Alabama

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