The Mississippi River is in many ways the greatest in the world. The river rises in northern Minnesota in Lake Hernando de Soto beyond Lake Itasca. This is about 2,500 miles from the place shown in the view. Where it rises, the land is about 1,472 feet above sea level. It flows almost due south. Its largest tributary is the Missouri, taken together, are 4,200 miles long. Forty-four tributaries of the Mississippi are navigable. One of the most interesting places along the Mississippi is at its mouth where it flows into the gulf. Here it has built up islands of earth brought down from above. These islands in the mouth are called the delta. This is because in the mouth of the Nile River the island there is in the shape of the Greek letter Delta, formed like a triangle. Naturally all this dirt makes the water shallow, and spreads it over a great area. To deepen the channel, the Government built jetties from opposite points on the banks out into the river. These were constructed by driving piles into the mud and making a basket-work of pillows between the piling. When the spaces between the willows filled with mud, there was a solid wall which caused the water to flow swiftly between the ends of the jetties. In this way the river is forced to wash out its own channel. These are called Eads Jetties because the engineering was done by Captain Eads, the man who Built the bridge across the Mississippi at St. Louis. The jetties cost about $6,000,000, and were completed in 1879. The place here shown is where pilots are taken on the large river steamers. These pilots guide the steamers through the waterways. Keystone ID: 16757 Note: All titles, descriptions, and location coordinates are from the original Keystone Slide documentation as supplied by the Keystone View Company. No text has been edited or changed.