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Broglen River is a tributary of the Black Warrior River. Before the Black Warrior earns its name it starts as three of Alabama’s most significant forks. The largest of these, the Sipsey Fork, is the western most fork, and flows into the Mulberry Fork, the center prong. These merged streams flow together until they meet the Locust Fork, the right prong, at the Jefferson and Walker County line. It is here that they become the Black Warrior River. The natural union of these powerful forks has now been submerged under the waters of Bankhead Lake. All of these forks flow through sandstone canyons of the Cumberland Plateau and provide some of Alabama’s best whitewater runs and most scenic vistas. MULBERRY FORK TRIBUTARIES Blackwater Creek, Bridge Creek, Brindley Creek, Broglen River, Cane Creek, Copeland Creek, Dorsey Creek, Duck Creek, Eightmile Creek, Lost Creek, Marriott Creek, Pan Creek, Poley Creek, Sipsey Fork, Splunge Creek, Tibb Creek, Wolf Creek. The upper Mulberry Fork Watershed includes the Broglen River, Duck River, and Upper Mulberry Fork. These tributaries harbor a total of 27 species of fish in this subwatershed.
Broglen River is a river in Cullman County, Alabama. Broglen River originates at 34°08?41?N 86°46?07?W? / ?34.14482°N 86.76860°W? / 34.14482; -86.76860 near Hanceville, and discharges into the Mulberry Fork River at 34°03?43?N 86°41?46?W? / ?34.06204°N 86.69610°W? / 34.06204; -86.69610 near Chamblees Mill.[1]