Thief River | |
Pushpin Map: | Minnesota |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Mouth of the Thief River |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | United States |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | Minnesota |
Subdivision Type3: | Counties |
Subdivision Name3: | Pennington and Marshall counties |
Source1 Location: | Thief Lake, Marshall County, Minnesota |
Mouth Location: | Thief River Falls, Pennington County, Minnesota |
Mouth Coordinates: | 48.1243°N -96.1695°W |
River System: | Hudson Bay |
The Thief River is a 40.3adj=midNaNadj=mid[1] tributary of the Red Lake River in northwestern Minnesota in the United States. Via the Red Lake River, the Red River of the North, Lake Winnipeg and the Nelson River, it is part of the watershed of Hudson Bay.
The Thief River flows from Thief Lake in Thief Lake Township of northeastern Marshall County and flows generally south-southwestwardly to Thief River Falls in northwestern Pennington County. The river flows through the Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge.
Thief Lake collects the Moose River, and the Thief River collects the Mud River in the Agassiz Refuge.
Thief River Falls takes its name from a geographic feature, the falls of the Red Lake River at its confluence with the Thief River. The name of the river is a loose translation of the Ojibwe phrase, Gimood-akiwi ziibi, literally, the "Stolen-land river" or "Thieving Land river," which originated when a band of Dakota Indians occupied a secret encampment along the river, hence "stealing" the land, before being discovered and routed by the neighboring Ojibwe.[2]