The Missouri River borders McKenzie County to the north and the Little Missouri River flows through McKenzie County in North Dakota.
"North Dakota" or "North Dakota 2012" Or the map title could reflect what the map is about. For example: "North Dakota Bodies of Water" or "North Dakota Highways".
North Dakota has both surface water (lakes, rivers, streams) and ground water (aquifers and wells).
The Red River (of the North) forms North Dakota's eastern boundary with Minnesota.
North Dakota's water resources come from both surface water(lakes, rivers, streams) and underground water (aquifers and wells).
Delaware and North Dakota
North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin
There are no major bodies of water that border Wyoming. There are, however six states that do. Starting from the north and going clockwise, they are Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah and Idaho.
If you are asking about the drinking water in North Dakota, it varies from water system to water system but all water systems are required to meet state and federal standards. If you are asking about water for recreation, as in boating, etc., there are many opportunities for all kinds of water recreation with a wide variety of location in North Dakota. It all depends on where you want to go and what you want to do.
The Missouri River is a major U.S. river. It starts in the Rocky Mountains of western Montana. It flows through Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri where it flows into the Mississippi River.
North Dakota ranks 19th in size by total area (land+water) with 70,699.79 square miles.
North Dakota has 2,948 square miles of surface water or about 2.4% of the total area of 70,700 square miles