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Thompson River

The Thompson River is the largest tributary of the Fraser River,[3] flowing through the south-central portion of British Columbia, Canada. The Thompson River has two main branches, the South Thompson River and the North Thompson River. The river is home to several varieties of Pacific salmon and trout. The area's geological history was heavily influenced by glaciation, and the several large glacial lakes have filled the river valley over the last 12,000 years. Archaeological evidence shows human habitation in the watershed dating back at least 8,300 years. The Thompson was named by Fraser River explorer, Simon Fraser, in honour of his friend, Columbia Basin explorer David Thompson. Recreational use of the river includes whitewater rafting and angling.

Thompson River
A CN railway crossing of the North Thompson River in Kamloops
A map of the Thompson River's watershed
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
Land DistrictKamloops Division Yale
Physical characteristics
SourceConfluence of the North & South Thompson Rivers
 • locationKamloops
 • coordinates50°40′49″N 120°20′36″W / 50.68028°N 120.34333°W / 50.68028; -120.34333
 • elevation345 m (1,132 ft)
MouthFraser River
 • location
Lytton
 • coordinates
50°14′07″N 121°35′00″W / 50.23528°N 121.58333°W / 50.23528; -121.58333Coordinates: 50°14′07″N 121°35′00″W / 50.23528°N 121.58333°W / 50.23528; -121.58333[1]
 • elevation
195 m (640 ft)
Length489 km (304 mi)[2]
Basin size56,000 km2 (22,000 sq mi)[3]
Discharge 
 • locationSpences Bridge
 • average773 m3/s (27,300 cu ft/s)
 • minimum171 m3/s (6,000 cu ft/s)
 • maximum4,200 m3/s (150,000 cu ft/s)

Geography

South Thompson River

The South Thompson originates at the outlet of Little Shuswap Lake at the town of Chase and flows approximately 55 kilometres (34 mi) southwest through a wide valley to Kamloops where it joins the North Thompson. Highway 1, the Trans-Canada Highway and the mainline of the Canadian Pacific Railway parallel the river. Little Shuswap Lake is fed by the Little River, which drains Shuswap Lake, which is fed by several rivers and creeks.

North Thompson River

The North Thompson originates at the toe of the Thompson Glacier[4] in the Cariboo Mountains west of the community of Valemount and flows generally south towards Kamloops and the confluence with the South Thompson. For most of its length, the river is paralleled by Highway 5, and the Canadian National Railway (both of which cross the river a couple times). The North Thompson passes by several small communities, the most notable being Blue River, Clearwater & Barriere.

The North Thompson picks up the Clearwater River at the town of Clearwater. The Clearwater, the North Thompson's largest tributary, drains much of Wells Gray Provincial Park.

A notable feature along the North Thompson is Little Hells Gate, a mini-replica of the much larger rapid on the Fraser downstream from the mouth of the Thompson. About 17.4 kilometres (10.8 mi) upstream from the small town of Avola, the river is forced through a narrow chute only about 30 feet (9.1 m) wide creating a rapid that resembles the Fraser's famous rapid.

Mainstream

 
The darker waters of the Thompson meet the Fraser at Lytton.

At Kamloops, the combined Thompson River flows 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from the confluence of the North and South Thompson Rivers before reaching Kamloops Lake, which is roughly 30 kilometres (19 mi) in length, ending at the town of Savona. From there it flows in a meandering course westwards through a broad valley area. At Ashcroft, the Thompson Canyon begins and the river turns southwestward to its confluence with the Fraser. The river is paralleled by the Trans-Canada Highway, the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian National Railway.

From Ashcroft to Lytton, the river is completely confined within Thompson Canyon, making for spectacular scenery. The Thompson River joins the Fraser River in Lytton. There is a striking stretch of dark black cliffside just downstream from Ashcroft and visible from the Logan Lake-Ashcroft highway is officially named the Black Canyon. Just below the town of Spences Bridge was the site of a major rail disaster in the early 20th century. Communities along this section are Bighorn, Shaw Springs, and Goldpan.

Geology

The Thompson River valley has existed in some form for at least 50 million years; however, for much of its history, it did not drain to the southwest into the Pacific Ocean as it does today.[5] Geologists believe water from the river flowed northward, through the Cariboo region, eventually entering what is the modern-day Peace River drainage basin and ending up in the Arctic Ocean.[6] This flow direction is estimated to have ended approximately 2 million years ago, as the Pleistocene era of heavy glaciation began.[6]

Glacial lakes

During the era of massive glaciers in the Thompson River valley, water from the area likely drained eastward, through the Shuswap Lake area into what is now the Columbia River drainage. This flow direction was influenced by large ice buildups in the Thompson valley, which created extensive glacial lakes. Two large glacial lakes, Glacial Lake Thompson and Glacial Lake Deadman, occupied much of the modern river's course from 13,000 BCE to 10,000 BCE. These deep, narrow, ribbon-shaped lakes held large volumes of water; Glacial Lake Thompson held nearly 84 cubic kilometres (20 cu mi) at its highest point. The lake stretched from Spences Bridge in the west to the eastern reaches of Shuswap Lake, as well as far up the northern reaches of the North Thompson river valley.[7] The last large glacial lake, Lake Deadman, was drained by a catastrophic ice dam failure, called a jökulhlaup, in about 10,000 BCE. This event released as much as 20 cubic kilometres (4.8 cu mi) of water southwest into the Fraser River system, possibly depositing sediments as far away as the Salish Sea, more than 250 kilometres (160 mi) away. From this point, the Thompson waters stopped flowing eastward into the Columbia River system, and the river became a tributary of the Fraser.[7]

Landslides

 
Remnants of a landslide near the railway in the lower Thompson River valley

Because of large deposits of glacial silt, sand, and gravel in the lower Thompson River valley, large landslides are common.[8] The area downstream from the town of Ashcroft is prone to landslide events; eight major events between 1880 and 1982 have been recorded. Several of them have obstructed the river, and caused large, temporary lakes. An 1880 slide caused the formation of a short-lived lake over 14 kilometers long with a maximum depth of 18 meters. These slides have caused major damage to the rail lines and farming operations in the river valley. Heavy irrigation has been blamed for some of the events.[8]

History

Aboriginal peoples

 
Thompson River, British Columbia, 1927

The Interior region of British Columbia was first populated after the retreat of the continental ice sheets of the last ice age. The ice moved out of the Thompson River region approximately 11,000 BCE, and migration by the ancestors of the Nlaka'pamux and Secwepemc people is thought to have occurred soon after.[9] Some of the older archaeological sites on the lower Thompson include the Drynoch Slide site, near Spences Bridge, with artifacts dating to about 7350 BCE, and the Landels site, near Ashcroft, which dates to older than 8000 BCE.[10] Archaeologists theorize early settlers lived in small groups, beginning with nomadic bands hunting ungulates on the plateaus around the river, who then established more permanent dwellings along the river benches as their fishing techniques developed.[11]

The South Thompson has the watershed's oldest dated evidence of human habitation, at the Gore site near Pritchard. The human remains date to 8250 BCE, and bone analysis suggests the person was a hunter with small amounts of his protein coming from salmon.[12] Archaeological investigation in the North Thompson has been sparse, but artifacts near Bridge Lake to the west of the river have been dated to 3000 BCE, while pieces found near the tributary Clearwater River are possibly as old as 6000 to 7000 BCE.[12]

European exploration and settlement

Explorer of the Fraser River and North West Company employee Simon Fraser named the river, after passing its mouth on the Fraser in 1808.[13] He named the river after his colleague, David Thompson, who had mapped much of western Canada and was at the time exploring the Columbia River basin to the east. Thompson never visited the river that bears his name.[13] The first documented traverse of the Thompson from Kamloops to Lytton was by Hudson's Bay Company governor George Simpson in 1828.[14] More Europeans entered the Thompson River valley in the early to mid 1800s, drawn by the fur trade and small gold rushes. Others started farming on the fertile benches of the river, and a North West Company trading fort at the confluence of the North and South rivers became the city of Kamloops, now the largest human population center in the watershed.[13]

Ecology

 
Sockeye salmon during the salmon run, Tsútswecw Provincial Park

The Thompson River supports 24 fish species, including two considered endangered. It also hosts carp, which are not native to the watershed. The river is home to large populations of Pacific salmon, including coho, sockeye, pink and chinook. Through its tributary, the Adams River, the Thompson has one of the largest sockeye salmon runs in the world.[15] Pink salmon spawn mostly below Kamloops Lake, while coho spawning beds are found in 40 of the Thompson watershed's streams and rivers. Coastal rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus), including an anadromous variety called steelhead, are found in the river along with a local strain the Kamloops rainbow trout which occurs in Kamloops Lake at the Thompson River headwaters and other nearby lakes. Other fish species include round whitefish, largescale sucker, bridgelip sucker, northern pikeminnow, longnose dace, and slimy sculpin.[16]

Several bird species are found in Thompson River environments, including osprey, merganser, wood ducks, and American dippers. Golden eagles are found near the confluence with the Fraser,[17] and Bald eagles congregate on the river during the salmon run. Trumpeter swans use the South Thompson on their migratory route. Rattlesnakes are found in the dry sagebrush regions of the lower river. Aquatic insects found in the river system are dominated by three groups: mayflies, midges, and caddisflies. Many of these species emerge with the spring snowmelt, which greatly increases the volume of flow on the river.[15]

Conservation and recreation

The Thompson River and its two branches are mostly unprotected through parks or reserves. Small sections of the river are within provincial parks, including Steelhead, Juniper, Goldpan, and North Thompson Provincial Parks. Some of its tributaries, such as the Clearwater, are more protected through large parks like Wells Gray. However, unlike major river systems to the north and east like the Columbia and Nechako, the Thompson has no hydroelectric dams or major man-made water diversions.[13] Under the British Columbia Fish Protection Act of 1997, the Thompson cannot be considered for future dam construction.[18]

Conservation of the Thompson's fisheries, especially its salmon population, has been a focus of provincial, federal, and international bodies, such as the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) and the Pacific Salmon Commission.

 
Hwy 5 bridge, first crossing of N. Thompson River after emerging from the Cariboo Mountains

Angling

From the 1950s through the early 1990s the Thompson River was considered one of the premier steelhead angling destinations in North America. The river hosted large runs of both summer and winter run anadromous coastal rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus). In the late 1980s the runs were estimated at over 10,000 fish.[19] The river attracted anglers from around the world seeking powerful Thompson River steelhead. In 1982, the average male winter run Thompson River steelhead was 16 pounds (7.3 kg).[20] By the late 1990s, steelhead populations began to decline due to a wide variety of adverse environmental conditions and overfishing by commercial and First Nations gill netters. In 2016, annual steelhead numbers entering the Thompson were estimated to be less than 400 fish. Low numbers have prompted conservation organizations and sportsman's associations to petition Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC), for Canada's Species At Risk Act (SARA) protections.[21] The river is subject to catch and release angling only for steelhead and has severely restricted seasons to protect the wild stocks of remaining steelhead.[22]

Whitewater rafting

The rapids of the lower Thompson are used for recreational whitewater rafting. The first commercial rafting operation on the river began in the 1970s, based out of Spences Bridge.[23] Notable whitewater features on the lower river include the Frog, named for a frog-shaped rock formation, and the Jaws of Death, named by CPR engineers.[5] Rapids on the river reach up to Class 5 on the International Scale of River Difficulty.

Major Tributaries

 
The South Thompson River valley, near Monte Creek

North Thompson River

South Thompson River

Mainstream

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Thompson River". BC Geographical Names.
  2. ^ Thompson River 2005-05-10 at the Wayback Machine, The Columbia Gazetteer of North America
  3. ^ a b Thompson River, BritishColumbia.com
  4. ^ "Thompson Glacier". BC Geographical Names.
  5. ^ a b Fandritch 2013, p. 270.
  6. ^ a b Fandritch 2013, p. 271.
  7. ^ a b Johnsen, Timothy F.; Brennand, Tracy A. (2004). "Late-glacial lakes in the Thompson Basin, British Columbia: paleogeography and evolution" (PDF). Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. National Research Council (Canada). 41 (11): 1367–1383. doi:10.1139/E04-074.
  8. ^ a b Clague, John J. (August 1, 2003). "Geologic Framework of Large Historic Landslides in Thompson River Valley, British Columbia". Environmental & Engineering Geoscience. 9 (3): 201–212. doi:10.2113/9.3.201.
  9. ^ Rousseau 1993, p. 140.
  10. ^ Rousseau 1993, p. 153.
  11. ^ Rousseau 1993, p. 168.
  12. ^ a b Rousseau 1993, p. 156.
  13. ^ a b c d Benke & Cushing 2005, p. 708.
  14. ^ Fandritch 2013, p. 7.
  15. ^ a b Benke & Cushing 2005, p. 710.
  16. ^ Benke & Cushing 2005, p. 725.
  17. ^ Fandritch 2013, p. 284.
  18. ^ "BILL 25 -- 1997: FISH PROTECTION ACT". www.env.gov.bc.ca. Retrieved 2016-11-30.
  19. ^ Combs, Trey (1999). "Thompson River". Steelhead Fly Fishing. Heritage House Publishing Co. pp. 218–228. ISBN 9781895811728. Retrieved December 5, 2016.
  20. ^ Knap, Jerome J. (March 1982). "Fishing Across Canada". Field and Stream. LXXXVI (11): 138. Retrieved December 5, 2016.
  21. ^ Wedeking, Brett (March 18, 2016). "At Risk Status Sought for Thompson Steelhead". The Drake (drakemag.com). Retrieved December 5, 2016.
  22. ^ "Changes to Thompson River steelhead management". BC Gov News-Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations. July 8, 2014. Retrieved December 5, 2016.
  23. ^ Fandritch 2013, p. 186.

References

  • Rousseau, Mike (Autumn 1993). "Early Prehistoric Occupation of South-Central British Columbia". BC Studies. University of British Columbia. 99. ISSN 0005-2949.
  • Benke, Arthur C.; Cushing, Colbert E. (2005). Rivers of North America. Boston: Elsevier. ISBN 9780120882533.
  • Fandrich, Bernie (2013). British Columbia's Majestic Thompson River: Km-by-km Guide, Events, and Tales. Lytton, BC: Nicomen House. ISBN 9780991734504.

External links

  •   Media related to Thompson River at Wikimedia Commons

thompson, river, other, uses, disambiguation, largest, tributary, fraser, river, flowing, through, south, central, portion, british, columbia, canada, main, branches, south, north, river, home, several, varieties, pacific, salmon, trout, area, geological, hist. For other uses see Thompson River disambiguation The Thompson River is the largest tributary of the Fraser River 3 flowing through the south central portion of British Columbia Canada The Thompson River has two main branches the South Thompson River and the North Thompson River The river is home to several varieties of Pacific salmon and trout The area s geological history was heavily influenced by glaciation and the several large glacial lakes have filled the river valley over the last 12 000 years Archaeological evidence shows human habitation in the watershed dating back at least 8 300 years The Thompson was named by Fraser River explorer Simon Fraser in honour of his friend Columbia Basin explorer David Thompson Recreational use of the river includes whitewater rafting and angling Thompson RiverA CN railway crossing of the North Thompson River in KamloopsA map of the Thompson River s watershedLocationCountryCanadaProvinceBritish ColumbiaLand DistrictKamloops Division YalePhysical characteristicsSourceConfluence of the North amp South Thompson Rivers locationKamloops coordinates50 40 49 N 120 20 36 W 50 68028 N 120 34333 W 50 68028 120 34333 elevation345 m 1 132 ft MouthFraser River locationLytton coordinates50 14 07 N 121 35 00 W 50 23528 N 121 58333 W 50 23528 121 58333 Coordinates 50 14 07 N 121 35 00 W 50 23528 N 121 58333 W 50 23528 121 58333 1 elevation195 m 640 ft Length489 km 304 mi 2 Basin size56 000 km2 22 000 sq mi 3 Discharge locationSpences Bridge average773 m3 s 27 300 cu ft s minimum171 m3 s 6 000 cu ft s maximum4 200 m3 s 150 000 cu ft s Contents 1 Geography 1 1 South Thompson River 1 2 North Thompson River 1 3 Mainstream 2 Geology 2 1 Glacial lakes 2 2 Landslides 3 History 3 1 Aboriginal peoples 3 2 European exploration and settlement 4 Ecology 5 Conservation and recreation 5 1 Angling 5 2 Whitewater rafting 6 Major Tributaries 6 1 North Thompson River 6 2 South Thompson River 6 3 Mainstream 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksGeography EditSouth Thompson River Edit The South Thompson originates at the outlet of Little Shuswap Lake at the town of Chase and flows approximately 55 kilometres 34 mi southwest through a wide valley to Kamloops where it joins the North Thompson Highway 1 the Trans Canada Highway and the mainline of the Canadian Pacific Railway parallel the river Little Shuswap Lake is fed by the Little River which drains Shuswap Lake which is fed by several rivers and creeks North Thompson River Edit The North Thompson originates at the toe of the Thompson Glacier 4 in the Cariboo Mountains west of the community of Valemount and flows generally south towards Kamloops and the confluence with the South Thompson For most of its length the river is paralleled by Highway 5 and the Canadian National Railway both of which cross the river a couple times The North Thompson passes by several small communities the most notable being Blue River Clearwater amp Barriere The North Thompson picks up the Clearwater River at the town of Clearwater The Clearwater the North Thompson s largest tributary drains much of Wells Gray Provincial Park A notable feature along the North Thompson is Little Hells Gate a mini replica of the much larger rapid on the Fraser downstream from the mouth of the Thompson About 17 4 kilometres 10 8 mi upstream from the small town of Avola the river is forced through a narrow chute only about 30 feet 9 1 m wide creating a rapid that resembles the Fraser s famous rapid Mainstream Edit The darker waters of the Thompson meet the Fraser at Lytton At Kamloops the combined Thompson River flows 15 kilometres 9 3 mi from the confluence of the North and South Thompson Rivers before reaching Kamloops Lake which is roughly 30 kilometres 19 mi in length ending at the town of Savona From there it flows in a meandering course westwards through a broad valley area At Ashcroft the Thompson Canyon begins and the river turns southwestward to its confluence with the Fraser The river is paralleled by the Trans Canada Highway the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian National Railway From Ashcroft to Lytton the river is completely confined within Thompson Canyon making for spectacular scenery The Thompson River joins the Fraser River in Lytton There is a striking stretch of dark black cliffside just downstream from Ashcroft and visible from the Logan Lake Ashcroft highway is officially named the Black Canyon Just below the town of Spences Bridge was the site of a major rail disaster in the early 20th century Communities along this section are Bighorn Shaw Springs and Goldpan Geology EditThe Thompson River valley has existed in some form for at least 50 million years however for much of its history it did not drain to the southwest into the Pacific Ocean as it does today 5 Geologists believe water from the river flowed northward through the Cariboo region eventually entering what is the modern day Peace River drainage basin and ending up in the Arctic Ocean 6 This flow direction is estimated to have ended approximately 2 million years ago as the Pleistocene era of heavy glaciation began 6 Glacial lakes Edit During the era of massive glaciers in the Thompson River valley water from the area likely drained eastward through the Shuswap Lake area into what is now the Columbia River drainage This flow direction was influenced by large ice buildups in the Thompson valley which created extensive glacial lakes Two large glacial lakes Glacial Lake Thompson and Glacial Lake Deadman occupied much of the modern river s course from 13 000 BCE to 10 000 BCE These deep narrow ribbon shaped lakes held large volumes of water Glacial Lake Thompson held nearly 84 cubic kilometres 20 cu mi at its highest point The lake stretched from Spences Bridge in the west to the eastern reaches of Shuswap Lake as well as far up the northern reaches of the North Thompson river valley 7 The last large glacial lake Lake Deadman was drained by a catastrophic ice dam failure called a jokulhlaup in about 10 000 BCE This event released as much as 20 cubic kilometres 4 8 cu mi of water southwest into the Fraser River system possibly depositing sediments as far away as the Salish Sea more than 250 kilometres 160 mi away From this point the Thompson waters stopped flowing eastward into the Columbia River system and the river became a tributary of the Fraser 7 Landslides Edit Remnants of a landslide near the railway in the lower Thompson River valley Because of large deposits of glacial silt sand and gravel in the lower Thompson River valley large landslides are common 8 The area downstream from the town of Ashcroft is prone to landslide events eight major events between 1880 and 1982 have been recorded Several of them have obstructed the river and caused large temporary lakes An 1880 slide caused the formation of a short lived lake over 14 kilometers long with a maximum depth of 18 meters These slides have caused major damage to the rail lines and farming operations in the river valley Heavy irrigation has been blamed for some of the events 8 History EditAboriginal peoples Edit Thompson River British Columbia 1927 The Interior region of British Columbia was first populated after the retreat of the continental ice sheets of the last ice age The ice moved out of the Thompson River region approximately 11 000 BCE and migration by the ancestors of the Nlaka pamux and Secwepemc people is thought to have occurred soon after 9 Some of the older archaeological sites on the lower Thompson include the Drynoch Slide site near Spences Bridge with artifacts dating to about 7350 BCE and the Landels site near Ashcroft which dates to older than 8000 BCE 10 Archaeologists theorize early settlers lived in small groups beginning with nomadic bands hunting ungulates on the plateaus around the river who then established more permanent dwellings along the river benches as their fishing techniques developed 11 The South Thompson has the watershed s oldest dated evidence of human habitation at the Gore site near Pritchard The human remains date to 8250 BCE and bone analysis suggests the person was a hunter with small amounts of his protein coming from salmon 12 Archaeological investigation in the North Thompson has been sparse but artifacts near Bridge Lake to the west of the river have been dated to 3000 BCE while pieces found near the tributary Clearwater River are possibly as old as 6000 to 7000 BCE 12 European exploration and settlement Edit Explorer of the Fraser River and North West Company employee Simon Fraser named the river after passing its mouth on the Fraser in 1808 13 He named the river after his colleague David Thompson who had mapped much of western Canada and was at the time exploring the Columbia River basin to the east Thompson never visited the river that bears his name 13 The first documented traverse of the Thompson from Kamloops to Lytton was by Hudson s Bay Company governor George Simpson in 1828 14 More Europeans entered the Thompson River valley in the early to mid 1800s drawn by the fur trade and small gold rushes Others started farming on the fertile benches of the river and a North West Company trading fort at the confluence of the North and South rivers became the city of Kamloops now the largest human population center in the watershed 13 Ecology Edit Sockeye salmon during the salmon run Tsutswecw Provincial Park The Thompson River supports 24 fish species including two considered endangered It also hosts carp which are not native to the watershed The river is home to large populations of Pacific salmon including coho sockeye pink and chinook Through its tributary the Adams River the Thompson has one of the largest sockeye salmon runs in the world 15 Pink salmon spawn mostly below Kamloops Lake while coho spawning beds are found in 40 of the Thompson watershed s streams and rivers Coastal rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus including an anadromous variety called steelhead are found in the river along with a local strain the Kamloops rainbow trout which occurs in Kamloops Lake at the Thompson River headwaters and other nearby lakes Other fish species include round whitefish largescale sucker bridgelip sucker northern pikeminnow longnose dace and slimy sculpin 16 Several bird species are found in Thompson River environments including osprey merganser wood ducks and American dippers Golden eagles are found near the confluence with the Fraser 17 and Bald eagles congregate on the river during the salmon run Trumpeter swans use the South Thompson on their migratory route Rattlesnakes are found in the dry sagebrush regions of the lower river Aquatic insects found in the river system are dominated by three groups mayflies midges and caddisflies Many of these species emerge with the spring snowmelt which greatly increases the volume of flow on the river 15 Conservation and recreation EditThe Thompson River and its two branches are mostly unprotected through parks or reserves Small sections of the river are within provincial parks including Steelhead Juniper Goldpan and North Thompson Provincial Parks Some of its tributaries such as the Clearwater are more protected through large parks like Wells Gray However unlike major river systems to the north and east like the Columbia and Nechako the Thompson has no hydroelectric dams or major man made water diversions 13 Under the British Columbia Fish Protection Act of 1997 the Thompson cannot be considered for future dam construction 18 Conservation of the Thompson s fisheries especially its salmon population has been a focus of provincial federal and international bodies such as the Department of Fisheries and Oceans DFO and the Pacific Salmon Commission Hwy 5 bridge first crossing of N Thompson River after emerging from the Cariboo Mountains Angling Edit From the 1950s through the early 1990s the Thompson River was considered one of the premier steelhead angling destinations in North America The river hosted large runs of both summer and winter run anadromous coastal rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus In the late 1980s the runs were estimated at over 10 000 fish 19 The river attracted anglers from around the world seeking powerful Thompson River steelhead In 1982 the average male winter run Thompson River steelhead was 16 pounds 7 3 kg 20 By the late 1990s steelhead populations began to decline due to a wide variety of adverse environmental conditions and overfishing by commercial and First Nations gill netters In 2016 annual steelhead numbers entering the Thompson were estimated to be less than 400 fish Low numbers have prompted conservation organizations and sportsman s associations to petition Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC for Canada s Species At Risk Act SARA protections 21 The river is subject to catch and release angling only for steelhead and has severely restricted seasons to protect the wild stocks of remaining steelhead 22 Whitewater rafting Edit The rapids of the lower Thompson are used for recreational whitewater rafting The first commercial rafting operation on the river began in the 1970s based out of Spences Bridge 23 Notable whitewater features on the lower river include the Frog named for a frog shaped rock formation and the Jaws of Death named by CPR engineers 5 Rapids on the river reach up to Class 5 on the International Scale of River Difficulty Major Tributaries Edit The South Thompson River valley near Monte Creek North Thompson River Edit Albreda River Thunder River Mud Creek Blue River Mad River Raft River Clearwater River Barriere RiverSouth Thompson River Edit Little River via Little Shuswap Lake from Shuswap Lake Chase Creek Monte CreekMainstream Edit Tranquille River via Kamloops Lake Deadman River Bonaparte River Oregon Jack Creek Nicola River Murray Creek Skoonka Creek Nicoamen River Botanie CreekSee also EditList of tributaries of the Fraser River List of British Columbia rivers List of crossings of the Thompson RiverNotes Edit Thompson River BC Geographical Names Thompson River Archived 2005 05 10 at the Wayback Machine The Columbia Gazetteer of North America a b Thompson River BritishColumbia com Thompson Glacier BC Geographical Names a b Fandritch 2013 p 270 sfn error no target CITEREFFandritch2013 help a b Fandritch 2013 p 271 sfn error no target CITEREFFandritch2013 help a b Johnsen Timothy F Brennand Tracy A 2004 Late glacial lakes in the Thompson Basin British Columbia paleogeography and evolution PDF Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences National Research Council Canada 41 11 1367 1383 doi 10 1139 E04 074 a b Clague John J August 1 2003 Geologic Framework of Large Historic Landslides in Thompson River Valley British Columbia Environmental amp Engineering Geoscience 9 3 201 212 doi 10 2113 9 3 201 Rousseau 1993 p 140 Rousseau 1993 p 153 Rousseau 1993 p 168 a b Rousseau 1993 p 156 a b c d Benke amp Cushing 2005 p 708 Fandritch 2013 p 7 sfn error no target CITEREFFandritch2013 help a b Benke amp Cushing 2005 p 710 Benke amp Cushing 2005 p 725 Fandritch 2013 p 284 sfn error no target CITEREFFandritch2013 help BILL 25 1997 FISH PROTECTION ACT www env gov bc ca Retrieved 2016 11 30 Combs Trey 1999 Thompson River Steelhead Fly Fishing Heritage House Publishing Co pp 218 228 ISBN 9781895811728 Retrieved December 5 2016 Knap Jerome J March 1982 Fishing Across Canada Field and Stream LXXXVI 11 138 Retrieved December 5 2016 Wedeking Brett March 18 2016 At Risk Status Sought for Thompson Steelhead The Drake drakemag com Retrieved December 5 2016 Changes to Thompson River steelhead management BC Gov News Ministry of Forests Lands and Natural Resource Operations July 8 2014 Retrieved December 5 2016 Fandritch 2013 p 186 sfn error no target CITEREFFandritch2013 help References EditRousseau Mike Autumn 1993 Early Prehistoric Occupation of South Central British Columbia BC Studies University of British Columbia 99 ISSN 0005 2949 Benke Arthur C Cushing Colbert E 2005 Rivers of North America Boston Elsevier ISBN 9780120882533 Fandrich Bernie 2013 British Columbia s Majestic Thompson River Km by km Guide Events and Tales Lytton BC Nicomen House ISBN 9780991734504 External links Edit Media related to Thompson River at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thompson River amp oldid 1123216565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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