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Big Creek (Cuivre River tributary)

Missouri river stubsRivers of Lincoln County, MissouriRivers of MissouriRivers of St. Charles County, MissouriRivers of Warren County, Missouri

Big Creek is a stream in Lincoln, St. Charles and Warren counties of the U.S. state of Missouri. It is a tributary of the Cuivre River. The source area for the stream lies just southwest of Warrenton in Warren County. The stream flows north passing under Interstate 70 and turns east passing under Missouri Route 47 before entering Lincoln county. The stream meanders east and becomes the boundary between Lincoln and St. Charles counties. It passes under US Route 61 and enters the Cuivre to the north of Wentzville, and the communities of Flint Hill and Enon.An early variant name was "Eagle Fork". According to tradition, the former name was applied because eagles often attacked an early settler's hogs.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Big Creek (Cuivre River tributary) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Big Creek (Cuivre River tributary)
Bastean Road,

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N 38.878888888889 ° E -90.827222222222 °
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Bastean Road 2701
63385
Missouri, United States
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Wentzville Assembly

Wentzville Assembly is a General Motors automobile assembly facility in Wentzville, Missouri, opened in 1983. Located at 1500 East Route A in Wentzville, the 3.7 million square foot plant sits on 569 acres approximately 40 miles west of St. Louis, just off of I-70. With a similar floor plan to its contemporaries, Michigan's Orion Assembly and Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly plants, the facility includes vehicle assembly as well as body stamping facilities. Originally manufacturing full-size Buick, Oldsmobile and Pontiac sedans, the plant assumed operations of the previous St. Louis Truck Assembly which had been in operation since 1920. In 1996, production shifted from manufacturing unibody, front-drive passenger cars to rear-drive, body on frame trucks, GM's full-size Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana cargo vans on the GMT600 platform, previously manufactured at Lordstown Assembly (Ohio) and Flint Assembly (Michigan). The changeover involved completely gutting and revamping the plant to provide robotic body assembly. The GMT600 vans received a significant revision for the 2003 model year, known internally as the GMT610, which included a new front end, new powertrains ("LS" engines), left hand side cargo doors, and AWD models. In 2014, GM replaced the lighter 1500-series vans with the Chevrolet City Express built by Nissan in Mexico, retaining manufacture of the commercial-grade models in Wentzville. Also in 2014, Wentzville began manufacturing the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon, whose predecessors had been manuactured at the shuttered Shreveport Assembly factory in Louisiana. Wentzville has received numerous quality awards over the years for both the mid size truck and full size van models.