
Minnesota - North Dakota - South Dakota Tri-point Witness Monument
N 45° 56.115 W 096° 33.821
14T E 688867 N 5089739
Quick Description: A stone post marking the location where the states of Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota meet near White Rock, South Dakota. However, the monument appears to actually be located in the state of North Dakota.
Location: North Dakota, United States
Date Posted: 9/2/2009 5:41:43 PM
Waymark Code: WM7516
Views: 7
Long Description:The following information is from
'http://www.bjbsoftware.com/corners/pointdetail.php3?point=58'
target=_blank >The Corner Corner website. Although it states
that you need a 4WD vehicle to reach the tri-point witness
monument, I reached it with a 2WD compact sedan without any
trouble.
The tri-point witness monument shown on the USGS topo map is
easy to reach by farm roads near White Rock, SD. With a 4WD vehicle
you can get quite close to it. There is some confusion, however, as
to the exact location of the tri-point. The monument's E face
contains an inscription stating that the tri-point lies 9 chains
(594 feet) to the E. This corresponds to a position in the Bois de
Sioux River, as shown on the following carefully measured map
fragment (The intermediate tick mark corresponds to 594
feet.)
The map shows the tri-point only 80 feet E of the monument.
We carefully measured the position of the USGS tri-point using
electronic and paper copies of the map to obtained coordinates. We
navigated to that position using GPS and found a partially exposed
large rock, to which we added several smaller stones to form an
embryonic cairn. We paced off a distance of 135 feet from the cairn
to the witness monument. The 55 foot discrepancy between the map
measurement and the paced distance is just barely within the 18
meter inherent GPS error and close to the 40-foot map accuracy
standard used on the topo map, so our cairn is probably between 15
and 95 feet too far E.
Our best guess is that the inscription on the monument is
correct (i.e., the tri-point is in the river). Historically, the
river was the boundary between Minnesota and the Dakota Territory.
We find it remarkable, though, that the tri-point presently is in
the river because the river supposedly has been straightened and
re-routed since the boundary was established.