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Trinity River (California)

The Trinity River (Yurok: Hoopa or Hupa; Hupa: hun') is a major river in northwestern California in the United States and is the principal tributary of the Klamath River. The Trinity flows for 165 miles (266 km) through the Klamath Mountains and Coast Ranges, with a watershed area of nearly 3,000 square miles (7,800 km2) in Trinity and Humboldt Counties. Designated a National Wild and Scenic River, along most of its course the Trinity flows swiftly through tight canyons and mountain meadows.

Trinity River
Hoopa River
Trinity River near Weaverville
Map of the Trinity River and Klamath River watersheds. The Trinity River is shown in dark blue, with its watershed highlighted in dark yellow. The South Fork Trinity River extends southward, while the main Trinity River curves east then north.
Location
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
Physical characteristics
SourceScott Mountains
 • locationTrinity County
 • coordinates41°19′53″N 122°33′9″W / 41.33139°N 122.55250°W / 41.33139; -122.55250[1]
 • elevation5,557 ft (1,694 m)[n 1]
MouthKlamath River
 • location
Weitchpec
 • coordinates
41°11′5″N 123°42′31″W / 41.18472°N 123.70861°W / 41.18472; -123.70861[1]
 • elevation
190 ft (58 m)[1]
Length165 mi (266 km)
Basin size2,936 sq mi (7,600 km2)[2]
Discharge 
 • locationHoopa, about 12.5 mi (20.1 km) from the mouth[3]
 • average4,849 cu ft/s (137.3 m3/s)[3]
 • minimum162 cu ft/s (4.6 m3/s)
 • maximum231,000 cu ft/s (6,500 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftEast Fork, South Fork
 • rightStuart Fork, North Fork, New River
TypeWild, Scenic, Recreational
DesignatedJanuary 19, 1981

The river is known for its once prolific runs of anadromous fish, notably Chinook salmon and steelhead, which sustained Native American tribes for thousands of years. Due to its remoteness, the Trinity did not feature prominently in the early European colonization of California, but the gold rush in the mid-1800s brought thousands of gold seekers to the area. The river was named by Major Pierson B. Reading who, upon reaching the river in 1848, mistakenly believed it to flow into the Pacific Ocean at Trinidad Bay. During and after the gold rush, the influx of settlers and miners into the Trinity River country led to conflict with indigenous tribes, many of which saw severe depopulation due to fighting and foreign diseases. In the following decades logging and ranching, combined with mining runoff, significantly changed the river's ecology and led to the decline of its fish populations.

The Trinity River is an important water source for irrigation and hydroelectricity generation, as well as a major center of recreational activities such as gold panning, fishing and whitewater rafting. Since 1964 the Trinity River has been dammed to create Trinity Lake, the third largest man-made lake in the state.[4] As much as 90 percent of the upper Trinity River watershed was diverted for agriculture in the Central Valley. In 1991 environmental regulations were enacted, requiring a greater release of water to the Trinity River in order to protect fish. However, the use of Trinity River water remains a contentious issue, especially in years of drought.

Course edit

 
The Trinity River, looking north at Salyer. The silty South Fork joins the river from below.

The Trinity River begins deep in the Scott Mountains, in Trinity County, at the confluence of High Camp Creek and Chilcoot Creek.[5] It flows south through a deep valley between the Trinity Mountains to the east and the Salmon Mountains/Trinity Alps to the west, picking up Coffee Creek, before entering Trinity Lake, a large reservoir created by the Trinity Dam. The East Fork and Stuart Fork of the Trinity River also flow into the reservoir along with many other tributaries.[6] Just below Trinity Dam is the smaller Lewiston Dam, which diverts part of the Trinity River through a hydroelectric plant to the Sacramento River Basin as part of the Central Valley Project, providing irrigation water to California's Central Valley.[7]

Below Lewiston Dam the Trinity River passes the towns of Lewiston and Douglas City and turns west, passing within a few miles of Weaverville, the seat of Trinity County and the main population center of the area. It then turns northwest, past Junction City, and receives the North Fork Trinity River at Helena. Further west it passes the former mining settlement of Big Bar and enters a deep gorge, which provides the route for Highway 299, the principal road connecting Redding to the Humboldt Bay area. At Burnt Ranch it receives the New River from the north. At Salyer the South Fork, its main tributary, enters from the south, nearly doubling the flow.[5]

At the confluence of the South Fork, the Trinity River turns sharply north, entering Humboldt County. It flows through the wider steep-sided namesake valley of the Hoopa Valley Reservation, past the towns of Willow Creek and Hoopa. It joins the Klamath River at Weitchpec, 44 miles (71 km) above the mouth of the larger river on the Pacific Ocean. The confluence marks the point where the Klamath turns from its generally southwesterly course to flow north towards the sea. As the crow flies, Weitchpec is situated about 30 miles (48 km) northeast of Eureka.[5]

The Trinity River is a predominantly rain-fed river, with the highest flows occurring between December and April and the lowest from August through October. The water level can rise quickly in the winter when large Pacific storms strike California's north coast. Almost no precipitation occurs in summer, when the primary source of flow is snowmelt from the higher elevations of the Klamath Mountains and groundwater base flow. In addition, diversion of water to the Central Valley has greatly reduced the total flow of the river since the 1960s, though conversely, a required minimum dam release for protection of migrating salmon results in a flow rate during the dry season that is higher than it naturally would be.[8][9]

Streamflow edit

 
Swift Creek, in the headwaters of the Trinity River, is mostly fed by snowmelt.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) operates eight real-time stream gages on the Trinity River. The lowermost gage, located at Hoopa, measures runoff from 2,853 square miles (7,390 km2), or 97 percent of the Trinity River watershed. The annual discharge, averaged over the 1964–2013 period, was 4,849 cubic feet per second (137.3 m3/s). The average discharge between 1912–1960, prior to construction of Trinity and Lewiston Dams, was 5,618 cubic feet per second (159.1 m3/s).[3] The maximum flow was 231,000 cubic feet per second (6,500 m3/s) on December 22, 1964, during the Christmas flood of 1964, and the lowest was 162 cubic feet per second (4.6 m3/s) on October 4, 1931.[3]

The peak flow in 1964 was greatly attenuated by the Trinity Dam which had just started reservoir filling at the time, perhaps by as much as 100,000 cubic feet per second (2,800 m3/s).[10] However, the record-breaking rains of that winter swelled tributaries below the dam and contributed to a crest fully 20 feet (6.1 m) higher than the second highest peak, recorded in December 1955.[3][11]

Trinity River monthly mean discharge at Hoopa (cfs)[12]

The other USGS gages are located at Coffee Creek (above Trinity Lake),[13] below Lewiston Dam,[14] above[15] and below[16] Douglas City, at Junction City,[17] at Helena,[18] and at Burnt Ranch.[19]

Watershed edit

 
Trinity River watershed

The Trinity River's 2,936-square-mile (7,600 km2) watershed drains a rugged, forested region of California's North Coast. The highest point in the watershed is 8,888-foot (2,709 m) Sawtooth Peak in the Trinity Alps;[20] the elevation is 190 feet (58 m) where the Trinity meets the Klamath River in the town of Salyer. The watershed is almost entirely covered by mountains, with the only level land in a few narrow valleys: the Weaverville basin, and the Hoopa, Hyampom and Hayfork Valleys. The Hayfork Valley is the largest agricultural area in Trinity County, with about 52,000 acres (21,000 ha) of farmland. About 80 percent of the Trinity River watershed is federal land managed by the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The remaining 20 percent are privately owned; about half are owned by logging companies.[21]

The overall climate is Mediterranean, with cool, wet winters and hot, dry summers.[22] Annual precipitation over the Trinity River watershed averages 57 inches (1,400 mm). Precipitation ranges from 37 inches (940 mm) in lowlands around Weaverville and Hayfork, to as high as 85 inches (2,200 mm) in some mountain ranges close to the coast.[21] The high rainfall combined with the rugged geography results in extremely fast runoff and a high risk of flooding during winter storms. Large volumes of rocks and sediment carried by floods are spread along the rivers forming wide alluvial channels. In general, human activities such as mining and road construction have increased the rate of erosion within the watershed and consequentially the amount of sediment carried into the rivers. Dam building has had the opposite effect, by blocking natural sediment sources to a long section of the Trinity River. Both have had notable impacts on river geomorphology, altering the development of riparian zones and fish habitat.[23]

 
Trinity River near Hoopa

The Trinity River watershed borders several major California drainage basins; these are the Mad River and Redwood Creek to the west, the Salmon River and Scott River (tributaries of the Klamath River) to the north, and Clear Creek and Cottonwood Creek (both tributaries of the Sacramento River) to the east and south, respectively.[5] Fir, oak, and pine forests cover about 92 percent of the watershed. Chaparral and shrubs account for slightly over 5 percent, and grassland and barren land each cover approximately 1 percent. Riparian zones and wetlands encompass 0.5 percent of the watershed. Less than 2 percent of the watershed is urbanized.[22]

About 86 percent of the Trinity River watershed is in Trinity County. As of the 2010 census, the population of Trinity County was 13,786. With a population density of 4.3 people per square mile (1.7/km2) it is one of the least densely populated counties in California. Only 415 square miles (1,070 km2), or about 14 percent of the western part of the basin, is in Humboldt County.[24] The part of the Trinity River watershed in Humboldt County is also sparsely populated, with the exception of the Hoopa Valley Reservation, which was home to 2,930 people as of 2011.[25] Extractive industries such as mining and logging, and to a limited extent farming and ranching, have been the main economic drivers in the Trinity River basin since European settlement in the 1800s. These have declined in part due to increasing environmental regulations. Tourism has been an increasingly important part of the economy especially after the creation of the Trinity Lake reservoir in 1964.[20]

Geology edit

The lands that make up the Trinity River basin today began to take shape over 200 million years ago by the collision of several exotic terranes – or crustal fragments of the Pacific Plate – with the North American Plate, causing uplift of the sea floor under what is now northwestern California. During the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, tectonic movement along the plate boundary produced a range of mountains much higher than those found in the area today.[26] Over millions of years these mountains were eroded, then reformed again as the next oceanic terrane collided with the continental crust. This repeating cycle of erosion and orogeny created the complex "jumble of different rock types"[27] that characterizes the region today.[28] Rocks commonly found in the Trinity River area include gabbro, chert, granite, diorite, limestone, sandstone, serpentine, schist and marble.[26] Gold-bearing quartz veins are widespread in local metamorphic rock formations; the richness of the area made it among the focal points of the California Gold Rush.[29]

 
Trinity Alps west of Trinity Lake

The Klamath Mountains, which make up the eastern part of the watershed are quite young in geologic terms, no more than 2 or 3 million years old.[27] The present shape of the mountains was highly influenced by underground volcanic activity, which created batholiths, domes of igneous rock formed by cooled magma. They raised the elevation of the terrain above and created the widespread granite and diorite formations found in the area today.[27] The higher mountains, including the Trinity Alps – the highest range in northwest California – were also sculpted by glaciation during successive Ice Ages, the last of which ended roughly 10,000 years ago. Glacial erosion produced numerous granite outcroppings, tarns, cirques and knife-edged ridges. Remnants of these glaciers, or "glacierets", are still extant in the higher valleys.[26][27]

The Coast Ranges pass through the western part of the Trinity River Basin and consist of even younger rock formations, chiefly the Franciscan Assemblage.[30]: 11  The Franciscan formation consists of more unstable sedimentary and igneous rocks and soils that are highly breakable and prone to erosion. They formed even more recently in geologic history than the Klamath Mountains, primarily due to uplift along the Cascadia subduction zone.[31] The Natural Resources Conservation Service refers to the Franciscan assemblage as a "nightmare of rocks" due to its complex and fragmented layers.[32] The most common type of rock is greywacke, followed by other types of sandstones and shales. Landslides and mass wasting are common in this region due to erosion as well as earthquakes.[32]

History edit

Native Americans edit

An archaeological site on the Trinity River at Cox Bar, with spear points dating from 3000–6000 BC, has some of the oldest evidence of human habitation in Northern California. This site is believed to be part of the early Borax Lake Pattern culture.[33] Archaeological evidence in the Whiskeytown area also indicates human presence as early as 5000 BC, although it is uncertain at what point the ancestors of modern Native American tribes arrived here.[34]

The Wintu people are the first recorded indigenous group in the Trinity River area. Their traditional lands included much of the upper (eastern) Trinity River in the present day area of Shasta-Trinity National Forest. There were nine major groups of Wintu spread across the Trinity, Upper Sacramento, and McCloud River valleys as well as parts of the South Fork Trinity River and its tributary Hayfork Creek. The Trinity River Wintu were known as nomsu's ("those being west"), and the Hayfork Wintu as norelmaq ("south-uphill people").[35]: 324  Many Wintu villages were located along the Trinity River, and were home to up to 150 people. Each village operated as an independent unit led by a chief, although the villagers interacted frequently through trade with each other as well as neighboring tribes, such as the Nomlaki, Achomawi and Shasta.[36]: 9 

 
A Hupa man fishes at the "Sugar Bowl" rapids on the Trinity River, c. 1923.

Since about 1000 A.D. the lower Trinity River has been inhabited by the Natinixwe, now known as the Hupa people.[37]: 31  Natinixwe is an endonym meaning "people of the place where the trails return". Their name for the Trinity River was hun' simply meaning "river".[38] The name "Hupa" or "Hoopa" appears to originate from the Yurok word for the Trinity River country, hopah, which was first recorded by ethnologist George Gibbs in 1852.[39]: 3–5 

The Hupa lived in the fertile Hoopa Valley along the Trinity River and the Hyampom Valley on the South Fork – some of the few flat lands in a region otherwise dominated by rugged mountains. A Yurok village called Weitspus stood at the site of present-day Weitchpec at the confluence of the Trinity and Klamath Rivers.[40] The Hupa traded with the coastal Yurok and Karok by using canoes to navigate the Trinity and Klamath Rivers. The trade arrangements with neighboring tribes were complex and involved the use of dentalium shells as currency.[41]

The Tsnungwe people, also known as the South Fork Hupa, lived pre-contact in the South Fork of the Trinity River area and Burnt Ranch/New River area. After the Gold Rush of 1849, many years of battles occurred between the Trinity River Indians and the miners/soldiers. Most surviving Tsnungwe were taken to the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation. By 1900, a Tsnungwe community had re-established around the ancient principal village of łe:lding at the mouth of the South Fork of the Trinity River. The tribe is still surviving there today and is recognized by both Humboldt County and Trinity County. The federal government considers the Tsnungwe to be a "previously recognized" tribe. The Tsnungwe Council is working towards having their federally recognized tribal status restored.[42]

The Chimariko people lived along the Trinity River canyon near its confluence with the New River.[43]: 62  They were enemies of the Hupa, but had friendly relations with the Wintu. The now extinct Chimariko language was of Northern Hokan origin, in contrast to the Athabaskan dialect of the Hupa and the Wintuan languages spoken by the Wintu. Carl Waldman describes in Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes (2014) that "the Chimariko occupied one of the smallest homelands, if not the smallest, of any distinct linguistic group in North America."[43]: 62 

The abundant salmon, steelhead and sturgeon runs in the Trinity River were central to the lives of indigenous peoples along the entire length of the river. Fishing provided their primary sustenance as well as goods for trade. Prior to the arrival of Europeans, native peoples took as much as 2,000,000 pounds (910,000 kg) of salmon from the Trinity River each year.[44] Native peoples also made meal of berries, seeds and acorns, and hunted game animals such as deer and elk that were drawn to the Trinity River.

Due to their proximity to trade routes in and around the Central Valley, the Wintu came into frequent contact with European explorers, traders and settlers. These initial meetings were peaceful, but the Wintu population – along with many other Central Valley tribes – were decimated by a malaria epidemic in the 1830s, accidentally introduced by Hudson's Bay Company fur trappers. In the following decades the remaining Wintu became embroiled in conflict as prospectors and settlers occupied their traditional lands. Some of these conflicts ended in deadly massacres. In 1846, one of the bloodiest single encounters occurred when soldiers led by John C. Frémont killed 175 Wintu, Maidu and Yana. In 1850 about 100 Trinity Wintu perished after being given poisoned food by white settlers. By 1910 the Wintu population had been reduced to about 1,000, from an estimated 12,000 prior to European contact.[35]: 324–325 

The Chimariko also suffered heavily when European prospectors entered the region in the 19th century searching for gold. After clashing with the Europeans, many members of the tribe were dispersed to Shasta territory or killed. Some returned to the Trinity River in the late 19th century, after the gold seekers had left. People of Chimariko ancestry continue to live in the region, although the tribe functionally no longer exists.[43]: 62 

Because of the geographic isolation of their homeland, the Hupa had few interactions with early European explorers, although they later came in conflict with miners looking for gold. Even after California became a US state in 1850, the Hupa continued to live on their traditional lands and were eventually granted a reservation here in 1876. They are the only Native American group in California to retain most of their original territory; today, the Hoopa Valley Reservation is the largest and most populous in the state.[45]: 110 

Explorers edit

Jedediah Smith's expedition to northwestern California in 1828 were some of the first Europeans to set foot in the Trinity River country. After departing from the Sacramento Valley Smith passed over the Klamath Mountains and arrived at what is probably now Hayfork Creek on April 18. They followed the creek to the South Fork and from there to the Trinity River and the Klamath River. After following the Klamath to the Pacific, they traveled north towards Oregon, thus becoming the first white men to travel from inland California to coastal Oregon.[46]: 501  Smith and his party traded with the Hupas and Yuroks in the area and their encounters were generally friendly. Early maps of the area label the South Fork, the lower Trinity and the lower Klamath as "Smith's River". The name was later applied to the Smith River further north, which Smith also crossed on the same expedition.[46] Harrison Rogers, a member of Smith's party, called the Trinity "Indian Scalp River" although the reason for this name is unknown.[47]: 294 

The Old Trinity Trail, which crosses the mountains between Redding and Weaverville (approximately where State Route 299 is today) was used by Native Americans for generations before Europeans came to the area. Hudson's Bay Company fur trappers may have used this route in search of beaver as early as the 1830s and 1840s;[46] trapping was common in the area until about 1845.[33] The trail pioneered by Smith was also used by fur trappers, including mountain man Ewing Young in 1832. Today part of the trail also forms the route of California State Route 36.[46] Major Pierson B. Reading (for whom the present city of Redding is named) explored the upper Trinity area in 1845 and is credited with the modern name of the river. Reading mistakenly thought that the Trinity flowed west to empty into the Pacific Ocean at Trinidad Bay. In 1849 prospectors confirmed the actual path of the river to flow into what, twenty years earlier had been called "Smith's River"; however, Reading's name stuck.[48]: 14 

Gold Rush edit

 
An early gold miner along the Trinity River

In July 1848, not too long after James Marshall's famous gold find at Sutter's Mill – which started the California Gold Rush – Major Reading discovered gold on the Trinity River. The find attracted thousands of miners to the area and created boomtowns such as Douglas City, Francis, Hoboken, Lake City, Lewiston, Junction City and Quimby. Weaverville, located at the end of the trail Reading had established from the Sacramento Valley to the Trinity, prospered as the main trade center through which gold was exchanged for imported supplies and services. The initial discoveries were placer deposits, carried by the river to settle in gravel bars.[49] The Trinity River gold rush is also noted for the large number of Chinese miners attracted to the area, as many as 2,500 by 1854. Many of the Chinese were from the Pearl River Delta (Guangdong region).[50]

Mining activity was initially concentrated in the eastern (upper) valleys of the Trinity River around Weaverville, as the hostile Native Americans and treacherous gorges around Burnt Ranch precluded the transport of rations and equipment to places further west. For about two decades the area was extremely productive, second only to the Sierra Nevada (the Mother Lode) itself. The rate at which gold was extracted, and new methods pioneered to access the harder to reach deposits, was feverish.[51] Author James Hilton remarked that Weaverville was a "Shangri-La, that strange and wonderful somewhere which is not a place but a state of mind."[51] The area was soon profiting $1.5 million a year, with hundreds of claims along the Trinity River equipped with flumes, waterwheels and other apparatus to separate fine gold from river gravel.[51]

 
Weaverville Joss House is a Taoist temple built in 1874 by Chinese gold miners who settled in the Trinity River area.

The Great Flood of 1862 largely obliterated the placer mining claims along this part of the Trinity River,[10] spurring prospectors to push west, establishing a pack trail to the area around the New River and the South Fork of the Trinity. In fact, the New River was named thusly for being a "new" river to explore for gold.[49] Although the river gold petered out by the 1870s, lode gold was discovered in the 1880s in the mountains above the Trinity River country. Because hard rock mining was required to access the gold bearing veins, new industries such as iron forges and stamp mills prospered in the region.[49]

Another profitable way to access gold was hydraulic mining operations, which sprang up across the Trinity River country starting in the 1860s. At one point, there were 307 hydraulic mines in Trinity County alone, of which 145 were "fully operational", all of which depended on the use of pressurized water to demolish hillsides in search of gold bearing ore.[10] This had an enormous impact on the landscape – leveling forests, carving huge gullies and burying streambeds under dozens of feet of sediment – which still characterizes the area today.[51] Elaborate flume, reservoir and tunnel systems were built to supply the massive quantities of water required by these "hydraulicking" operations.

The La Grange Mine which began operating in 1862 on Oregon Gulch, a small creek that flows into the Trinity, was the biggest hydraulic mine in California, covering over 3,000 acres (1,200 ha).[51] Tailings washed from this single mine buried the valley, the creek and the entire town of Oregon Gulch (which had been purchased by the mine owners in anticipation of this) under a staggering 110 million cubic yards (84,000,000 m3) of sediment.[10] This is equal to thirty times the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza.[52]

Post-Gold Rush settlement edit

In 1884 the California legislature banned hydraulic mining as the flow of tailings from hydraulic mines in the Sierra Nevada was silting up the Sacramento River, making it unnavigable. However, the Trinity hydraulic mines escaped this ban,[53] as the remote and swift flowing Trinity River was not considered a navigable watercourse.[54] Nevertheless, the largest deposits had been played out by the 1920s, and the mining settlements were abandoned or fell into decline. This brought on the last stage of commercial gold mining along the Trinity, as floating dredges (called "doodle-bugs" by the miners) were used to turn over the river bottoms that had been inaccessible by the placer miners a half-century earlier.[51] After World War II commercial dredges continued to operate on the Trinity, but at a reduced scale, finally ending in 1959, when the last claim was bought by the federal government in preparation for dam construction of the Central Valley Project.[10]

 
The lower Trinity River

Although most of the miners left, either to return home or settle elsewhere, some stayed to work in the ranching and logging industries that became the economic mainstay of the Trinity River area. Some also continued to search for gold long after the major deposits were gone; even today, recreational gold panning remains a popular activity along the Trinity.[55] One Mr. Jorstad who had been mining in the Trinity River country since the 1930s, continued to live in a small cabin at Pfeiffer Flat on the North Fork until his death in 1989.[48]: 15  Jorstad's cabin was an important rest stop for miners, hunters, hikers and fishermen along the North Fork for many years; it remains as a historical site maintained by the Forest Service.[56]

Although settlers had been farming and ranching in the Trinity River valley since the beginning of the gold rush, the number greatly increased after the gold rush when miners decided to settle down and homestead in the area. One of the major ranching areas was the wide valley known as Trinity Meadows, which is now flooded by Trinity Lake.[48]: 15  The Webber family bought a ranch along the Stuart Fork in 1922 and established a resort. Having traveled in Europe, the Webbers thought the area resembled the Austrian Alps, and so named the mountains along the upper Trinity River the "Trinity Alps".[48]: 16  During the 1870s, the Southern Pacific Railroad was extended from Sacramento through Redding and would eventually reach Oregon, making travel to the area easier than ever before.

Commercial logging had also been operating for years in the Trinity River country, but most of the timber produced was used locally. After World War II, logging greatly increased both due to high demand for housing domestically and abroad, and the introduction of more advanced technologies. In 1959 alone, loggers took 439 million board feet from Trinity County. The rate dropped after that, but logging continued at 200–300 million board feet per year well into the 1980s.[48]: 16 [20] Many logged areas were on steep mountains, and improper construction of roads and skid trails exposed slopes to erosion and landslides.[57]: C5-4  In 1988 several environmentalist groups including the Wilderness Society, Audubon Society and Sierra Club filed a lawsuit against the Forest Service, preventing the cutting of 18.4 million board feet of salvage lumber in an area with particularly high erosion risk. This generated pushback in the local timber industry, whose decline has partly been attributed to more stringent environmental regulations.[58][59]

Central Valley Project edit

 
Stuart Fork arm of Trinity Lake and the Trinity Alps

As early as the 1930s, the state of California had floated the idea of diverting water from the rainy north to support irrigation in the fertile, but dry San Joaquin Valley. A diversion of the Trinity River was contemplated in order to boost the available water supply for the Central Valley watershed, but planners eventually determined that the extra water was not yet needed. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation took over the Central Valley Project from the bankrupt state of California during the Great Depression in 1933 as a federal public works project, and in 1942 it began investigations to dam the Trinity River. However, the Trinity River plan was dropped in 1945, after the completion of nearby Shasta Dam.[60]

As the 1950s began, demand on the Colorado River – which forms the border of California and Arizona and provided most of Southern California's water – was moving toward unsustainable levels. The Bureau of Reclamation restarted its surveys of the Trinity River basin as part of a larger proposal to move water from northern to southern parts of the state, and compensate for the shortages on the Colorado. The United Western Investigation, in 1951, proposed the damming of nearly every river in the North Coast region of California, chiefly the Trinity, Klamath and Eel.[61]: 265–271  The Ah Pah Dam would have flooded the canyons of the Klamath and Trinity Rivers to form the largest reservoir in California. These grandiose plans culminated in the Pacific Southwest Water Plan of 1964, which sought to comprehensively link the water systems of California and the rest of the Colorado River Basin. One of the key projects was an aqueduct to transport North Coast water to the Imperial Valley, reducing its reliance on water from the Colorado River.[62] However, with the exception of the upper Trinity River project, none of these dam and diversion projects were ever realized.

 
Trinity Dam

The Trinity River project was first drafted on October 1, 1951, and authorized by Congress on January 2, 1953, as the Trinity River Division of the Central Valley Project. In 1955 Congress authorized an annual diversion of 704,000 acre-feet (0.868 km3) of water (56 percent of total flow) from the Trinity River, stating that the water could be exported "without detrimental effect on the fishery resources" of the Trinity.[63] In 1957 the Bureau of Reclamation revised the export volume to 865,000 acre-feet (1.067 km3).[64] Construction of Trinity Dam started in 1956 and was completed on December 23, 1963. The reservoir was originally named "Clair Engle Lake" to commemorate United States Senator Clair Engle, who played a crucial role in shepherding the Trinity bill through Congress; however, the name proved unpopular with locals, and it was changed to Trinity Lake in 1997.[65][66]

Trinity Dam, an earth embankment structure 538 feet (164 m) high, was the tallest embankment dam in the world at its completion in 1962 (it was surpassed by Oroville Dam, also in California, in 1968).[67] Trinity Lake can store a maximum of 2,447,650 acre-feet (3.01913 km3), or about twice the Trinity River's flow at this point. Below Trinity Dam is the much smaller Lewiston Dam, the actual point at which the water is diverted. The 10.7-mile (17.2 km) Clear Creek Tunnel conveys water under the Trinity Mountains to the Whiskeytown Lake reservoir, and from there it flows 2.4 miles (3.9 km) through the Spring Creek Tunnel to join the Sacramento River at Keswick Dam. Along the way the water drops some 1,500 feet (460 m) through three hydroelectric plants, generating nearly one billion kilowatt hours each year.[68][69][70] Water flow data for the Judge Francis Carr hydroelectric station located at the end of Trinity Tunnel indicates an annual average of 1,257 cubic feet per second (35.6 m3/s), or 910,700 acre-feet (1.1233 km3), diverted from the river between 1963 and 2013.[71]

The filling of the reservoir flooded the town of Trinity Center, one of the original main population centers of Trinity County, as well as the smaller communities of Stringtown and Minersville. Residents of the Trinity River valley were heavily opposed to the dam, but they had no recourse against eminent domain used by the federal government (although property owners were paid for their land). Many buildings in Trinity Center were moved to a new location on the western shore of the reservoir. The dam blocked salmon runs to 109 miles (175 km) of habitat in the upper Trinity River basin, destroying the fishing economy that had sustained local people for generations.[72]

Other residents welcomed the dam project for the economic benefits it would bring via hydropower and tourism, as the gold mining industry that had long supported the region was greatly diminished by the 1950s. By 1986 tourism in the Trinity River country accounted for 50–75 percent of business in the summer and 25 percent in the winter.[20] Many locals remained "so bitter about the dam that they tore down signs and misdirected tourists" for many years after the dam was built.[73]

Ecology edit

 
Emerald Lake, located at the headwaters of the Stuart Fork

With the exception of rocky alpine regions in the highest mountains, the Trinity River watershed is almost entirely forested. Mixed coniferous (fir and pine) forests dominate the landscape at elevations of up to 6,000 feet (1,800 m). Common tree species include ponderosa pine, Jeffrey pine, Douglas fir, white fir, red fir, sugar pine, knobcone pine and incense cedar. The watershed also includes some hardwood forests, typically located along canyon bottoms and streams, which are home to California black oak (Quercus kelloggii), madrone, tanbark oak, canyon live oak and bigleaf maple.[74] Stands of Port Orford cedar are common along the upper Trinity River;[74] Oregon white oak is widespread throughout lower elevations.[22] Fir forests comprise almost 74 percent of the forests in the Trinity River watershed; pine and hardwoods account for 13 percent each.[22] There are also limited amounts of chaparral, brush and grass/rangeland within the basin. Wildfires are common in the dry summers which receive little to no precipitation, aside from the occasional high elevation thunderstorm.[21]

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest encompasses nearly the entire Trinity River watershed with the exception of private inholdings and the small area in Humboldt County.[75] Large mammals found in the national forest include black bear, mountain lion, bobcat, coyote, gray fox, Columbian black-tailed deer (mule deer), and elk. River otters inhabit most streams. Other mammals include ringtails, raccoons, skunks, jackrabbits, martens and many squirrel and rat species including northern flying squirrel. Several species of bats are also found in the watershed, little brown bats being the most common.[76] The area around Trinity Lake has a significant nesting bald eagle population.[74]

Beaver also inhabit the Trinity River watershed although their numbers were much higher before fur trappers came to the area. In 1828, the Jedediah Smith expedition was helped across the Trinity River by the Yurok and camped on the east side of the Trinity River. His clerk, Harrison G. Rogers wrote, "Mr. Smith purchases all the beaver furs he can from them", suggesting that beaver were then plentiful on the Trinity or at least in the surrounding area.[77]

 
A pair of bald eagles along the Trinity River

The Trinity River was once known for its prolific anadromous fish (salmon, steelhead and sturgeon) runs. The actual number of fish returning to the river each year to spawn, prior to European settlement, is uncertain due to the lack of records. During the first half of the 20th century, before damming, the fall chinook salmon run was estimated at anywhere between 19,000 and 75,500.[78] The spring chinook and coho salmon runs were about 10,000 each and the annual steelhead run was about 50,000.[79]

Forest and river habitats in the watershed have been heavily affected by human activities ever since Gold Rush mining began in the 1800s. Commercial logging has caused mountain slopes to become more prone to erosion; even in areas that are no longer logged and have seen secondary forest growth, abandoned logging roads pose a serious erosive threat. Grazing of livestock has also degraded grasslands and exposed soils to runoff. This has resulted in river channels becoming clogged and confined by sediment, harming salmon and steelhead populations by burying gravel bars used by these fish for spawning.[31][80] Along the South Fork, this problem has been exacerbated by the inherently unstable rocks and soils of the Franciscan formation, causing mass wasting events that dump sediment into streams.

 
Lewiston Dam blocks fish migration to the upper Trinity River. The Trinity River Fish Hatchery is located below the dam.

After the Trinity and Lewiston Dams were complete, the Bureau of Reclamation did not adhere to the water export limits set in the project's authorization, diverting 72 percent of the total river flow[64] and as much as 90 percent at certain times.[63] On the main stem, dam construction has greatly reduced the capacity of the river to wash away excess sediment. The annual chinook salmon run has dropped by almost 80 percent since the 1950s.[78] In 2002, 65,000 adult salmon perished in a fish kill on the lower Trinity and Klamath rivers (the fish were mostly of Trinity stock).[81]

The Trinity River Division has also indirectly caused environmental impacts in other parts of California. Because no aqueduct or pipeline linking to the Imperial Valley or Colorado Basin was ever built, Trinity River water was and still is used in the Central Valley for irrigation. Most of it was used to develop new irrigation in the 600,000-acre (240,000 ha) Westlands Water District on the western side of the San Joaquin Valley,[82] which contains soils laced with salt and selenium.[81] In the 1980s, water run-off from the Westlands district contributed to the highly publicized contamination of Kesterson Reservoir, part of the agricultural drainage system and a significant refuge for birds and wildlife.[83]

After the completion of Lewiston Dam in 1963, the Bureau of Reclamation constructed the Trinity River Fish Hatchery to raise young steelhead, coho and chinook salmon.[84] The primary purpose of the hatchery was to compensate for the loss of 109 miles (175 km) of anadromous fish habitat above Lewiston Dam. The hatchery is operated by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to produce returns of 7,500 coho, 6,000 spring chinook, 70,000 fall chinook and 22,000 steelhead each year.[85] In 2014, the California Fish Hatchery Review Project found that Trinity Hatchery raised coho were out-competing wild stocks. The hatchery has since been required to carefully time releases of young fish in order to reduce the risk of competition.[86]

Restoration efforts edit

 
Volunteers with the Bureau of Land Management board kayaks to collect garbage from the river and its banks in 2022

After an environmental impact statement in 1991 the Bureau of Reclamation was required to make greater releases to the Trinity River below Lewiston Dam. On December 19, 2000, the Department of the Interior signed a Record of Decision (ROD) officially re-allocating Central Valley Project water for environmental purposes. This modified flow regime officially began in water year 2005.[87] Prior to this, annual releases to the Trinity River ranged from 150 to 300 cubic feet per second (4.2 to 8.5 m3/s), or about 109,000 to 217,000 acre-feet (134,000,000 to 268,000,000 m3) each year, with the exception of occasional flood water discharges. The ROD increases the minimum dam release to 368,600 acre-feet (0.4547 km3) or about 510 cubic feet per second (14 m3/s), even in "critically dry" years, with even greater releases made during years of normal and above average precipitation. These restrictions would reduce the Trinity River diversions about 28 percent on average; however, the impacts on the Central Valley Project as a whole would be far less, only about 1–4 percent. In addition, the project will periodically release high flows up to 11,000 cubic feet per second (310 m3/s) to simulate historic flooding and sediment transport conditions.[23]

In 2015 Humboldt County won a lawsuit against the Westlands Water District for an extra 50,000 acre-feet (62,000,000 m3) of water from the Trinity River for in-stream flows. Previously, the Bureau of Reclamation had included this sum in the water released for fishery management. Although this means more water for the Trinity River, no provision was made for commensurately reducing Central Valley Project water diversions, increasing the risk that Trinity Lake could be drained to "dead pool" in drought years.[81]

Trinity River restoration flows[23]
Water year
type
Trinity River
release
Trinity Release
volume
Max. CVP
diversion
Pct. flow
released
to river
Critically Dry 509 ft3/s
(14 m3/s)
368,600 acre.ft
(0.45 km3)
85,400 acre.ft
(0.11 km3)
81%
Dry 625 ft3/s
(18 m3/s)
452,600 acre.ft
(0.56 km3)
358,400 acre.ft
(0.44 km3)
56%
Normal 892 ft3/s
(25 m3/s)
646,500 acre.ft
(0.80 km3)
459,100 acre.ft
(0.56 km3)
58%
Wet 968 ft3/s
(27 m3/s)
701,000 acre.ft
(0.86 km3)
900,000 acre.ft
(1.11 km3)
44%
Extremely Wet 1,125 ft3/s
(32 m3/s)
815,200 acre.ft
(1.01 km3)
1,525,800 acre.ft
(1.88 km3)
35%

Construction crews have also worked to rehabilitate the river channel below the dam by clearing out mining debris and excess brush. However, these activities have been criticized by some environmental groups as too heavy-handed.[88] The California Water Impact Network stated channel rehabilitation was "an activity equivalent to a clear-cut on a Wild and Scenic River." Bulldozing of the riverbanks to clear space for juvenile salmon habitat has harmed steelhead spawning grounds, impacted public access and allowed the spread of invasive plant species.[89] Between 2005 and 2011, restoration work cost a total of $36 million.[88]

Recreation edit

 
Fly fishing on the Trinity River

The Trinity River and many of its tributaries have been part of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System since 1981. The main stem is designated from a point 100 yards (91 m) below Lewiston Dam to the confluence with the Klamath River. The North Fork and New River are designated from the boundary of the Trinity Alps Wilderness to the mouth, and the South Fork from State Route 36 to the mouth. A total of 44 miles (71 km) are classified as "wild", 39 miles (63 km) as "scenic" and 120 miles (190 km) as "recreational".[90] The South Fork is the largest river in California without a single dam along its length.[91] Although fish populations have declined since the early 1900s, fishing for salmon and steelhead has recovered on many parts of the river.[92] The Trinity is known as one of the best steelhead streams in the western United States and is home to both wild and hatchery fish.[93]: 111–116  The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has developed a safe eating advisory for fish caught in the Trinity River based on levels of mercury or PCBs found in local species.[94][95]

The Trinity is a popular whitewater rafting and kayaking river. Dam releases for fish restoration have incidentally increased the amount of water available for boating year-round. The river has three main whitewater runs, all known for their scenery and wildlife. The Pigeon Point section, alongside Highway 299, contains Class II-III (beginner to intermediate) rapids.[96] Below the takeout at Cedar Flat, the Trinity flows through the extremely hazardous Class V Burnt Ranch Gorge, which was first run in 1971 by three kayakers, one of whom died of a heart attack soon after finishing the run, due to the arduous work of portaging many rapids. This gave the area a bad reputation for many years; it was not until 1983 that commercial trips began on this section of the river.[97] The lower Trinity, much of which flows through the Hoopa Valley Reservation, is a Class II river with gentler and lower gradient despite having a greater volume of water flow.[98]

Recreational gold panning is another pastime along the Trinity. However, many streams in the area are located on private property, or are part of existing placer mining claims.[99] Claims in the area are administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).[55] Because the Trinity River flows through a patchwork of private and public lands, the BLM and Forest Service maintain 14 designated locations for river access between Lewiston and Pigeon Point (just below Helena).[100]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Boundary Descriptions and Names of Regions, Subregions, Accounting Units and Cataloging Units". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e USGS Gage #11530000 Trinity River at Hoopa, CA: Water-Data Report 2013. National Water Information System. U.S. Geological Survey. 2013. Accessed 2017-09-30.
  4. ^ "Trinity Lake Boating Safety Information and Map" (PDF). U.S. Forest Service. 2014. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d USGS Topo Maps for United States (Map). Cartography by United States Geological Survey. ACME Mapper. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  6. ^ "Upper Trinity River Watershed Assessment Report: Management and Action Plan" (PDF). Trinity County Resource Conservation District. March 2006. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  7. ^ . U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. October 1, 2012. Archived from the original on September 28, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  8. ^ . California Water Impact Network. Archived from the original on March 25, 2016. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
  9. ^ "Mainstem Trinity River Watershed Analysis". U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Klamath Resource Information System. 1995. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d e Krause, Andreas (July 1, 2010). "One Hundred and Fifty Years of Sediment Manipulation on the Trinity River" (PDF). 2nd Joint Federal Interagency Conference. Advisory Committee on Water Information. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
  11. ^ "Floods of December 1964 and January 1965 in the Western United States" (PDF). Geological Survey Water Supply Paper 1866-A. U.S. Geological Survey. 1971. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
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  34. ^ "Whiskeytown Unit General Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement". U.S. National Park Service. 1999. p. 61.
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  57. ^ U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (November 1980). Environmental Impact Statement on the Management of River Flows to Mitigate the Loss of the Anadromous Fishery of the Trinity River, California. U.S. Government Printing Office.
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  65. ^ Bezis, Jason A. (August 7, 2014). "Death of Sen. Clair Engle: Half century later". Red Bluff Daily News. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
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Notes edit

  1. ^ Source elevation derived from GNIS source coordinates[1] using Geoplaner.

Further reading edit

  • Palmer, Tim (2012). Field Guide to California Rivers. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-95219-5.

External links edit

  • BOR: Trinity River Restoration Program
  • Trinity River Adaptive Management Working Group
  • NPS: Trinity Wild and Scenic River
  • California Department of Water Resources: Trinity River and Tributaries Up-to-Date Flow Data
  • Trinity River Rafting
  • TrinityRiver.Org
  • Trinity Wild and Scenic River - BLM page

trinity, river, california, trinity, river, yurok, hoopa, hupa, hupa, major, river, northwestern, california, united, states, principal, tributary, klamath, river, trinity, flows, miles, through, klamath, mountains, coast, ranges, with, watershed, area, nearly. The Trinity River Yurok Hoopa or Hupa Hupa hun is a major river in northwestern California in the United States and is the principal tributary of the Klamath River The Trinity flows for 165 miles 266 km through the Klamath Mountains and Coast Ranges with a watershed area of nearly 3 000 square miles 7 800 km2 in Trinity and Humboldt Counties Designated a National Wild and Scenic River along most of its course the Trinity flows swiftly through tight canyons and mountain meadows Trinity RiverHoopa RiverTrinity River near WeavervilleMap of the Trinity River and Klamath River watersheds The Trinity River is shown in dark blue with its watershed highlighted in dark yellow The South Fork Trinity River extends southward while the main Trinity River curves east then north LocationCountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaPhysical characteristicsSourceScott Mountains locationTrinity County coordinates41 19 53 N 122 33 9 W 41 33139 N 122 55250 W 41 33139 122 55250 1 elevation5 557 ft 1 694 m n 1 MouthKlamath River locationWeitchpec coordinates41 11 5 N 123 42 31 W 41 18472 N 123 70861 W 41 18472 123 70861 1 elevation190 ft 58 m 1 Length165 mi 266 km Basin size2 936 sq mi 7 600 km2 2 Discharge locationHoopa about 12 5 mi 20 1 km from the mouth 3 average4 849 cu ft s 137 3 m3 s 3 minimum162 cu ft s 4 6 m3 s maximum231 000 cu ft s 6 500 m3 s Basin featuresTributaries leftEast Fork South Fork rightStuart Fork North Fork New RiverNational Wild and Scenic RiverTypeWild Scenic RecreationalDesignatedJanuary 19 1981 The river is known for its once prolific runs of anadromous fish notably Chinook salmon and steelhead which sustained Native American tribes for thousands of years Due to its remoteness the Trinity did not feature prominently in the early European colonization of California but the gold rush in the mid 1800s brought thousands of gold seekers to the area The river was named by Major Pierson B Reading who upon reaching the river in 1848 mistakenly believed it to flow into the Pacific Ocean at Trinidad Bay During and after the gold rush the influx of settlers and miners into the Trinity River country led to conflict with indigenous tribes many of which saw severe depopulation due to fighting and foreign diseases In the following decades logging and ranching combined with mining runoff significantly changed the river s ecology and led to the decline of its fish populations The Trinity River is an important water source for irrigation and hydroelectricity generation as well as a major center of recreational activities such as gold panning fishing and whitewater rafting Since 1964 the Trinity River has been dammed to create Trinity Lake the third largest man made lake in the state 4 As much as 90 percent of the upper Trinity River watershed was diverted for agriculture in the Central Valley In 1991 environmental regulations were enacted requiring a greater release of water to the Trinity River in order to protect fish However the use of Trinity River water remains a contentious issue especially in years of drought Contents 1 Course 1 1 Streamflow 2 Watershed 3 Geology 4 History 4 1 Native Americans 4 2 Explorers 4 3 Gold Rush 4 4 Post Gold Rush settlement 4 5 Central Valley Project 5 Ecology 5 1 Restoration efforts 6 Recreation 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksCourse edit nbsp The Trinity River looking north at Salyer The silty South Fork joins the river from below The Trinity River begins deep in the Scott Mountains in Trinity County at the confluence of High Camp Creek and Chilcoot Creek 5 It flows south through a deep valley between the Trinity Mountains to the east and the Salmon Mountains Trinity Alps to the west picking up Coffee Creek before entering Trinity Lake a large reservoir created by the Trinity Dam The East Fork and Stuart Fork of the Trinity River also flow into the reservoir along with many other tributaries 6 Just below Trinity Dam is the smaller Lewiston Dam which diverts part of the Trinity River through a hydroelectric plant to the Sacramento River Basin as part of the Central Valley Project providing irrigation water to California s Central Valley 7 Below Lewiston Dam the Trinity River passes the towns of Lewiston and Douglas City and turns west passing within a few miles of Weaverville the seat of Trinity County and the main population center of the area It then turns northwest past Junction City and receives the North Fork Trinity River at Helena Further west it passes the former mining settlement of Big Bar and enters a deep gorge which provides the route for Highway 299 the principal road connecting Redding to the Humboldt Bay area At Burnt Ranch it receives the New River from the north At Salyer the South Fork its main tributary enters from the south nearly doubling the flow 5 At the confluence of the South Fork the Trinity River turns sharply north entering Humboldt County It flows through the wider steep sided namesake valley of the Hoopa Valley Reservation past the towns of Willow Creek and Hoopa It joins the Klamath River at Weitchpec 44 miles 71 km above the mouth of the larger river on the Pacific Ocean The confluence marks the point where the Klamath turns from its generally southwesterly course to flow north towards the sea As the crow flies Weitchpec is situated about 30 miles 48 km northeast of Eureka 5 The Trinity River is a predominantly rain fed river with the highest flows occurring between December and April and the lowest from August through October The water level can rise quickly in the winter when large Pacific storms strike California s north coast Almost no precipitation occurs in summer when the primary source of flow is snowmelt from the higher elevations of the Klamath Mountains and groundwater base flow In addition diversion of water to the Central Valley has greatly reduced the total flow of the river since the 1960s though conversely a required minimum dam release for protection of migrating salmon results in a flow rate during the dry season that is higher than it naturally would be 8 9 Streamflow edit nbsp Swift Creek in the headwaters of the Trinity River is mostly fed by snowmelt The United States Geological Survey USGS operates eight real time stream gages on the Trinity River The lowermost gage located at Hoopa measures runoff from 2 853 square miles 7 390 km2 or 97 percent of the Trinity River watershed The annual discharge averaged over the 1964 2013 period was 4 849 cubic feet per second 137 3 m3 s The average discharge between 1912 1960 prior to construction of Trinity and Lewiston Dams was 5 618 cubic feet per second 159 1 m3 s 3 The maximum flow was 231 000 cubic feet per second 6 500 m3 s on December 22 1964 during the Christmas flood of 1964 and the lowest was 162 cubic feet per second 4 6 m3 s on October 4 1931 3 The peak flow in 1964 was greatly attenuated by the Trinity Dam which had just started reservoir filling at the time perhaps by as much as 100 000 cubic feet per second 2 800 m3 s 10 However the record breaking rains of that winter swelled tributaries below the dam and contributed to a crest fully 20 feet 6 1 m higher than the second highest peak recorded in December 1955 3 11 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Trinity River monthly mean discharge at Hoopa cfs 12 The other USGS gages are located at Coffee Creek above Trinity Lake 13 below Lewiston Dam 14 above 15 and below 16 Douglas City at Junction City 17 at Helena 18 and at Burnt Ranch 19 Watershed edit nbsp Trinity River watershed The Trinity River s 2 936 square mile 7 600 km2 watershed drains a rugged forested region of California s North Coast The highest point in the watershed is 8 888 foot 2 709 m Sawtooth Peak in the Trinity Alps 20 the elevation is 190 feet 58 m where the Trinity meets the Klamath River in the town of Salyer The watershed is almost entirely covered by mountains with the only level land in a few narrow valleys the Weaverville basin and the Hoopa Hyampom and Hayfork Valleys The Hayfork Valley is the largest agricultural area in Trinity County with about 52 000 acres 21 000 ha of farmland About 80 percent of the Trinity River watershed is federal land managed by the U S Forest Service and the U S Bureau of Land Management The remaining 20 percent are privately owned about half are owned by logging companies 21 The overall climate is Mediterranean with cool wet winters and hot dry summers 22 Annual precipitation over the Trinity River watershed averages 57 inches 1 400 mm Precipitation ranges from 37 inches 940 mm in lowlands around Weaverville and Hayfork to as high as 85 inches 2 200 mm in some mountain ranges close to the coast 21 The high rainfall combined with the rugged geography results in extremely fast runoff and a high risk of flooding during winter storms Large volumes of rocks and sediment carried by floods are spread along the rivers forming wide alluvial channels In general human activities such as mining and road construction have increased the rate of erosion within the watershed and consequentially the amount of sediment carried into the rivers Dam building has had the opposite effect by blocking natural sediment sources to a long section of the Trinity River Both have had notable impacts on river geomorphology altering the development of riparian zones and fish habitat 23 nbsp Trinity River near Hoopa The Trinity River watershed borders several major California drainage basins these are the Mad River and Redwood Creek to the west the Salmon River and Scott River tributaries of the Klamath River to the north and Clear Creek and Cottonwood Creek both tributaries of the Sacramento River to the east and south respectively 5 Fir oak and pine forests cover about 92 percent of the watershed Chaparral and shrubs account for slightly over 5 percent and grassland and barren land each cover approximately 1 percent Riparian zones and wetlands encompass 0 5 percent of the watershed Less than 2 percent of the watershed is urbanized 22 About 86 percent of the Trinity River watershed is in Trinity County As of the 2010 census the population of Trinity County was 13 786 With a population density of 4 3 people per square mile 1 7 km2 it is one of the least densely populated counties in California Only 415 square miles 1 070 km2 or about 14 percent of the western part of the basin is in Humboldt County 24 The part of the Trinity River watershed in Humboldt County is also sparsely populated with the exception of the Hoopa Valley Reservation which was home to 2 930 people as of 2011 25 Extractive industries such as mining and logging and to a limited extent farming and ranching have been the main economic drivers in the Trinity River basin since European settlement in the 1800s These have declined in part due to increasing environmental regulations Tourism has been an increasingly important part of the economy especially after the creation of the Trinity Lake reservoir in 1964 20 Geology editThe lands that make up the Trinity River basin today began to take shape over 200 million years ago by the collision of several exotic terranes or crustal fragments of the Pacific Plate with the North American Plate causing uplift of the sea floor under what is now northwestern California During the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods tectonic movement along the plate boundary produced a range of mountains much higher than those found in the area today 26 Over millions of years these mountains were eroded then reformed again as the next oceanic terrane collided with the continental crust This repeating cycle of erosion and orogeny created the complex jumble of different rock types 27 that characterizes the region today 28 Rocks commonly found in the Trinity River area include gabbro chert granite diorite limestone sandstone serpentine schist and marble 26 Gold bearing quartz veins are widespread in local metamorphic rock formations the richness of the area made it among the focal points of the California Gold Rush 29 nbsp Trinity Alps west of Trinity Lake The Klamath Mountains which make up the eastern part of the watershed are quite young in geologic terms no more than 2 or 3 million years old 27 The present shape of the mountains was highly influenced by underground volcanic activity which created batholiths domes of igneous rock formed by cooled magma They raised the elevation of the terrain above and created the widespread granite and diorite formations found in the area today 27 The higher mountains including the Trinity Alps the highest range in northwest California were also sculpted by glaciation during successive Ice Ages the last of which ended roughly 10 000 years ago Glacial erosion produced numerous granite outcroppings tarns cirques and knife edged ridges Remnants of these glaciers or glacierets are still extant in the higher valleys 26 27 The Coast Ranges pass through the western part of the Trinity River Basin and consist of even younger rock formations chiefly the Franciscan Assemblage 30 11 The Franciscan formation consists of more unstable sedimentary and igneous rocks and soils that are highly breakable and prone to erosion They formed even more recently in geologic history than the Klamath Mountains primarily due to uplift along the Cascadia subduction zone 31 The Natural Resources Conservation Service refers to the Franciscan assemblage as a nightmare of rocks due to its complex and fragmented layers 32 The most common type of rock is greywacke followed by other types of sandstones and shales Landslides and mass wasting are common in this region due to erosion as well as earthquakes 32 History editNative Americans edit An archaeological site on the Trinity River at Cox Bar with spear points dating from 3000 6000 BC has some of the oldest evidence of human habitation in Northern California This site is believed to be part of the early Borax Lake Pattern culture 33 Archaeological evidence in the Whiskeytown area also indicates human presence as early as 5000 BC although it is uncertain at what point the ancestors of modern Native American tribes arrived here 34 The Wintu people are the first recorded indigenous group in the Trinity River area Their traditional lands included much of the upper eastern Trinity River in the present day area of Shasta Trinity National Forest There were nine major groups of Wintu spread across the Trinity Upper Sacramento and McCloud River valleys as well as parts of the South Fork Trinity River and its tributary Hayfork Creek The Trinity River Wintu were known as nomsu s those being west and the Hayfork Wintu as norelmaq south uphill people 35 324 Many Wintu villages were located along the Trinity River and were home to up to 150 people Each village operated as an independent unit led by a chief although the villagers interacted frequently through trade with each other as well as neighboring tribes such as the Nomlaki Achomawi and Shasta 36 9 nbsp A Hupa man fishes at the Sugar Bowl rapids on the Trinity River c 1923 Since about 1000 A D the lower Trinity River has been inhabited by the Natinixwe now known as the Hupa people 37 31 Natinixwe is an endonym meaning people of the place where the trails return Their name for the Trinity River was hun simply meaning river 38 The name Hupa or Hoopa appears to originate from the Yurok word for the Trinity River country hopah which was first recorded by ethnologist George Gibbs in 1852 39 3 5 The Hupa lived in the fertile Hoopa Valley along the Trinity River and the Hyampom Valley on the South Fork some of the few flat lands in a region otherwise dominated by rugged mountains A Yurok village called Weitspus stood at the site of present day Weitchpec at the confluence of the Trinity and Klamath Rivers 40 The Hupa traded with the coastal Yurok and Karok by using canoes to navigate the Trinity and Klamath Rivers The trade arrangements with neighboring tribes were complex and involved the use of dentalium shells as currency 41 The Tsnungwe people also known as the South Fork Hupa lived pre contact in the South Fork of the Trinity River area and Burnt Ranch New River area After the Gold Rush of 1849 many years of battles occurred between the Trinity River Indians and the miners soldiers Most surviving Tsnungwe were taken to the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation By 1900 a Tsnungwe community had re established around the ancient principal village of le lding at the mouth of the South Fork of the Trinity River The tribe is still surviving there today and is recognized by both Humboldt County and Trinity County The federal government considers the Tsnungwe to be a previously recognized tribe The Tsnungwe Council is working towards having their federally recognized tribal status restored 42 The Chimariko people lived along the Trinity River canyon near its confluence with the New River 43 62 They were enemies of the Hupa but had friendly relations with the Wintu The now extinct Chimariko language was of Northern Hokan origin in contrast to the Athabaskan dialect of the Hupa and the Wintuan languages spoken by the Wintu Carl Waldman describes in Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes 2014 that the Chimariko occupied one of the smallest homelands if not the smallest of any distinct linguistic group in North America 43 62 The abundant salmon steelhead and sturgeon runs in the Trinity River were central to the lives of indigenous peoples along the entire length of the river Fishing provided their primary sustenance as well as goods for trade Prior to the arrival of Europeans native peoples took as much as 2 000 000 pounds 910 000 kg of salmon from the Trinity River each year 44 Native peoples also made meal of berries seeds and acorns and hunted game animals such as deer and elk that were drawn to the Trinity River Due to their proximity to trade routes in and around the Central Valley the Wintu came into frequent contact with European explorers traders and settlers These initial meetings were peaceful but the Wintu population along with many other Central Valley tribes were decimated by a malaria epidemic in the 1830s accidentally introduced by Hudson s Bay Company fur trappers In the following decades the remaining Wintu became embroiled in conflict as prospectors and settlers occupied their traditional lands Some of these conflicts ended in deadly massacres In 1846 one of the bloodiest single encounters occurred when soldiers led by John C Fremont killed 175 Wintu Maidu and Yana In 1850 about 100 Trinity Wintu perished after being given poisoned food by white settlers By 1910 the Wintu population had been reduced to about 1 000 from an estimated 12 000 prior to European contact 35 324 325 The Chimariko also suffered heavily when European prospectors entered the region in the 19th century searching for gold After clashing with the Europeans many members of the tribe were dispersed to Shasta territory or killed Some returned to the Trinity River in the late 19th century after the gold seekers had left People of Chimariko ancestry continue to live in the region although the tribe functionally no longer exists 43 62 Because of the geographic isolation of their homeland the Hupa had few interactions with early European explorers although they later came in conflict with miners looking for gold Even after California became a US state in 1850 the Hupa continued to live on their traditional lands and were eventually granted a reservation here in 1876 They are the only Native American group in California to retain most of their original territory today the Hoopa Valley Reservation is the largest and most populous in the state 45 110 Explorers edit Jedediah Smith s expedition to northwestern California in 1828 were some of the first Europeans to set foot in the Trinity River country After departing from the Sacramento Valley Smith passed over the Klamath Mountains and arrived at what is probably now Hayfork Creek on April 18 They followed the creek to the South Fork and from there to the Trinity River and the Klamath River After following the Klamath to the Pacific they traveled north towards Oregon thus becoming the first white men to travel from inland California to coastal Oregon 46 501 Smith and his party traded with the Hupas and Yuroks in the area and their encounters were generally friendly Early maps of the area label the South Fork the lower Trinity and the lower Klamath as Smith s River The name was later applied to the Smith River further north which Smith also crossed on the same expedition 46 Harrison Rogers a member of Smith s party called the Trinity Indian Scalp River although the reason for this name is unknown 47 294 The Old Trinity Trail which crosses the mountains between Redding and Weaverville approximately where State Route 299 is today was used by Native Americans for generations before Europeans came to the area Hudson s Bay Company fur trappers may have used this route in search of beaver as early as the 1830s and 1840s 46 trapping was common in the area until about 1845 33 The trail pioneered by Smith was also used by fur trappers including mountain man Ewing Young in 1832 Today part of the trail also forms the route of California State Route 36 46 Major Pierson B Reading for whom the present city of Redding is named explored the upper Trinity area in 1845 and is credited with the modern name of the river Reading mistakenly thought that the Trinity flowed west to empty into the Pacific Ocean at Trinidad Bay In 1849 prospectors confirmed the actual path of the river to flow into what twenty years earlier had been called Smith s River however Reading s name stuck 48 14 Gold Rush edit nbsp An early gold miner along the Trinity River In July 1848 not too long after James Marshall s famous gold find at Sutter s Mill which started the California Gold Rush Major Reading discovered gold on the Trinity River The find attracted thousands of miners to the area and created boomtowns such as Douglas City Francis Hoboken Lake City Lewiston Junction City and Quimby Weaverville located at the end of the trail Reading had established from the Sacramento Valley to the Trinity prospered as the main trade center through which gold was exchanged for imported supplies and services The initial discoveries were placer deposits carried by the river to settle in gravel bars 49 The Trinity River gold rush is also noted for the large number of Chinese miners attracted to the area as many as 2 500 by 1854 Many of the Chinese were from the Pearl River Delta Guangdong region 50 Mining activity was initially concentrated in the eastern upper valleys of the Trinity River around Weaverville as the hostile Native Americans and treacherous gorges around Burnt Ranch precluded the transport of rations and equipment to places further west For about two decades the area was extremely productive second only to the Sierra Nevada the Mother Lode itself The rate at which gold was extracted and new methods pioneered to access the harder to reach deposits was feverish 51 Author James Hilton remarked that Weaverville was a Shangri La that strange and wonderful somewhere which is not a place but a state of mind 51 The area was soon profiting 1 5 million a year with hundreds of claims along the Trinity River equipped with flumes waterwheels and other apparatus to separate fine gold from river gravel 51 nbsp Weaverville Joss House is a Taoist temple built in 1874 by Chinese gold miners who settled in the Trinity River area The Great Flood of 1862 largely obliterated the placer mining claims along this part of the Trinity River 10 spurring prospectors to push west establishing a pack trail to the area around the New River and the South Fork of the Trinity In fact the New River was named thusly for being a new river to explore for gold 49 Although the river gold petered out by the 1870s lode gold was discovered in the 1880s in the mountains above the Trinity River country Because hard rock mining was required to access the gold bearing veins new industries such as iron forges and stamp mills prospered in the region 49 Another profitable way to access gold was hydraulic mining operations which sprang up across the Trinity River country starting in the 1860s At one point there were 307 hydraulic mines in Trinity County alone of which 145 were fully operational all of which depended on the use of pressurized water to demolish hillsides in search of gold bearing ore 10 This had an enormous impact on the landscape leveling forests carving huge gullies and burying streambeds under dozens of feet of sediment which still characterizes the area today 51 Elaborate flume reservoir and tunnel systems were built to supply the massive quantities of water required by these hydraulicking operations The La Grange Mine which began operating in 1862 on Oregon Gulch a small creek that flows into the Trinity was the biggest hydraulic mine in California covering over 3 000 acres 1 200 ha 51 Tailings washed from this single mine buried the valley the creek and the entire town of Oregon Gulch which had been purchased by the mine owners in anticipation of this under a staggering 110 million cubic yards 84 000 000 m3 of sediment 10 This is equal to thirty times the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza 52 Post Gold Rush settlement edit In 1884 the California legislature banned hydraulic mining as the flow of tailings from hydraulic mines in the Sierra Nevada was silting up the Sacramento River making it unnavigable However the Trinity hydraulic mines escaped this ban 53 as the remote and swift flowing Trinity River was not considered a navigable watercourse 54 Nevertheless the largest deposits had been played out by the 1920s and the mining settlements were abandoned or fell into decline This brought on the last stage of commercial gold mining along the Trinity as floating dredges called doodle bugs by the miners were used to turn over the river bottoms that had been inaccessible by the placer miners a half century earlier 51 After World War II commercial dredges continued to operate on the Trinity but at a reduced scale finally ending in 1959 when the last claim was bought by the federal government in preparation for dam construction of the Central Valley Project 10 nbsp The lower Trinity River Although most of the miners left either to return home or settle elsewhere some stayed to work in the ranching and logging industries that became the economic mainstay of the Trinity River area Some also continued to search for gold long after the major deposits were gone even today recreational gold panning remains a popular activity along the Trinity 55 One Mr Jorstad who had been mining in the Trinity River country since the 1930s continued to live in a small cabin at Pfeiffer Flat on the North Fork until his death in 1989 48 15 Jorstad s cabin was an important rest stop for miners hunters hikers and fishermen along the North Fork for many years it remains as a historical site maintained by the Forest Service 56 Although settlers had been farming and ranching in the Trinity River valley since the beginning of the gold rush the number greatly increased after the gold rush when miners decided to settle down and homestead in the area One of the major ranching areas was the wide valley known as Trinity Meadows which is now flooded by Trinity Lake 48 15 The Webber family bought a ranch along the Stuart Fork in 1922 and established a resort Having traveled in Europe the Webbers thought the area resembled the Austrian Alps and so named the mountains along the upper Trinity River the Trinity Alps 48 16 During the 1870s the Southern Pacific Railroad was extended from Sacramento through Redding and would eventually reach Oregon making travel to the area easier than ever before Commercial logging had also been operating for years in the Trinity River country but most of the timber produced was used locally After World War II logging greatly increased both due to high demand for housing domestically and abroad and the introduction of more advanced technologies In 1959 alone loggers took 439 million board feet from Trinity County The rate dropped after that but logging continued at 200 300 million board feet per year well into the 1980s 48 16 20 Many logged areas were on steep mountains and improper construction of roads and skid trails exposed slopes to erosion and landslides 57 C5 4 In 1988 several environmentalist groups including the Wilderness Society Audubon Society and Sierra Club filed a lawsuit against the Forest Service preventing the cutting of 18 4 million board feet of salvage lumber in an area with particularly high erosion risk This generated pushback in the local timber industry whose decline has partly been attributed to more stringent environmental regulations 58 59 Central Valley Project edit nbsp Stuart Fork arm of Trinity Lake and the Trinity Alps As early as the 1930s the state of California had floated the idea of diverting water from the rainy north to support irrigation in the fertile but dry San Joaquin Valley A diversion of the Trinity River was contemplated in order to boost the available water supply for the Central Valley watershed but planners eventually determined that the extra water was not yet needed The U S Bureau of Reclamation took over the Central Valley Project from the bankrupt state of California during the Great Depression in 1933 as a federal public works project and in 1942 it began investigations to dam the Trinity River However the Trinity River plan was dropped in 1945 after the completion of nearby Shasta Dam 60 As the 1950s began demand on the Colorado River which forms the border of California and Arizona and provided most of Southern California s water was moving toward unsustainable levels The Bureau of Reclamation restarted its surveys of the Trinity River basin as part of a larger proposal to move water from northern to southern parts of the state and compensate for the shortages on the Colorado The United Western Investigation in 1951 proposed the damming of nearly every river in the North Coast region of California chiefly the Trinity Klamath and Eel 61 265 271 The Ah Pah Dam would have flooded the canyons of the Klamath and Trinity Rivers to form the largest reservoir in California These grandiose plans culminated in the Pacific Southwest Water Plan of 1964 which sought to comprehensively link the water systems of California and the rest of the Colorado River Basin One of the key projects was an aqueduct to transport North Coast water to the Imperial Valley reducing its reliance on water from the Colorado River 62 However with the exception of the upper Trinity River project none of these dam and diversion projects were ever realized nbsp Trinity Dam The Trinity River project was first drafted on October 1 1951 and authorized by Congress on January 2 1953 as the Trinity River Division of the Central Valley Project In 1955 Congress authorized an annual diversion of 704 000 acre feet 0 868 km3 of water 56 percent of total flow from the Trinity River stating that the water could be exported without detrimental effect on the fishery resources of the Trinity 63 In 1957 the Bureau of Reclamation revised the export volume to 865 000 acre feet 1 067 km3 64 Construction of Trinity Dam started in 1956 and was completed on December 23 1963 The reservoir was originally named Clair Engle Lake to commemorate United States Senator Clair Engle who played a crucial role in shepherding the Trinity bill through Congress however the name proved unpopular with locals and it was changed to Trinity Lake in 1997 65 66 Trinity Dam an earth embankment structure 538 feet 164 m high was the tallest embankment dam in the world at its completion in 1962 it was surpassed by Oroville Dam also in California in 1968 67 Trinity Lake can store a maximum of 2 447 650 acre feet 3 01913 km3 or about twice the Trinity River s flow at this point Below Trinity Dam is the much smaller Lewiston Dam the actual point at which the water is diverted The 10 7 mile 17 2 km Clear Creek Tunnel conveys water under the Trinity Mountains to the Whiskeytown Lake reservoir and from there it flows 2 4 miles 3 9 km through the Spring Creek Tunnel to join the Sacramento River at Keswick Dam Along the way the water drops some 1 500 feet 460 m through three hydroelectric plants generating nearly one billion kilowatt hours each year 68 69 70 Water flow data for the Judge Francis Carr hydroelectric station located at the end of Trinity Tunnel indicates an annual average of 1 257 cubic feet per second 35 6 m3 s or 910 700 acre feet 1 1233 km3 diverted from the river between 1963 and 2013 71 The filling of the reservoir flooded the town of Trinity Center one of the original main population centers of Trinity County as well as the smaller communities of Stringtown and Minersville Residents of the Trinity River valley were heavily opposed to the dam but they had no recourse against eminent domain used by the federal government although property owners were paid for their land Many buildings in Trinity Center were moved to a new location on the western shore of the reservoir The dam blocked salmon runs to 109 miles 175 km of habitat in the upper Trinity River basin destroying the fishing economy that had sustained local people for generations 72 Other residents welcomed the dam project for the economic benefits it would bring via hydropower and tourism as the gold mining industry that had long supported the region was greatly diminished by the 1950s By 1986 tourism in the Trinity River country accounted for 50 75 percent of business in the summer and 25 percent in the winter 20 Many locals remained so bitter about the dam that they tore down signs and misdirected tourists for many years after the dam was built 73 Ecology edit nbsp Emerald Lake located at the headwaters of the Stuart Fork With the exception of rocky alpine regions in the highest mountains the Trinity River watershed is almost entirely forested Mixed coniferous fir and pine forests dominate the landscape at elevations of up to 6 000 feet 1 800 m Common tree species include ponderosa pine Jeffrey pine Douglas fir white fir red fir sugar pine knobcone pine and incense cedar The watershed also includes some hardwood forests typically located along canyon bottoms and streams which are home to California black oak Quercus kelloggii madrone tanbark oak canyon live oak and bigleaf maple 74 Stands of Port Orford cedar are common along the upper Trinity River 74 Oregon white oak is widespread throughout lower elevations 22 Fir forests comprise almost 74 percent of the forests in the Trinity River watershed pine and hardwoods account for 13 percent each 22 There are also limited amounts of chaparral brush and grass rangeland within the basin Wildfires are common in the dry summers which receive little to no precipitation aside from the occasional high elevation thunderstorm 21 The Shasta Trinity National Forest encompasses nearly the entire Trinity River watershed with the exception of private inholdings and the small area in Humboldt County 75 Large mammals found in the national forest include black bear mountain lion bobcat coyote gray fox Columbian black tailed deer mule deer and elk River otters inhabit most streams Other mammals include ringtails raccoons skunks jackrabbits martens and many squirrel and rat species including northern flying squirrel Several species of bats are also found in the watershed little brown bats being the most common 76 The area around Trinity Lake has a significant nesting bald eagle population 74 Beaver also inhabit the Trinity River watershed although their numbers were much higher before fur trappers came to the area In 1828 the Jedediah Smith expedition was helped across the Trinity River by the Yurok and camped on the east side of the Trinity River His clerk Harrison G Rogers wrote Mr Smith purchases all the beaver furs he can from them suggesting that beaver were then plentiful on the Trinity or at least in the surrounding area 77 nbsp A pair of bald eagles along the Trinity River The Trinity River was once known for its prolific anadromous fish salmon steelhead and sturgeon runs The actual number of fish returning to the river each year to spawn prior to European settlement is uncertain due to the lack of records During the first half of the 20th century before damming the fall chinook salmon run was estimated at anywhere between 19 000 and 75 500 78 The spring chinook and coho salmon runs were about 10 000 each and the annual steelhead run was about 50 000 79 Forest and river habitats in the watershed have been heavily affected by human activities ever since Gold Rush mining began in the 1800s Commercial logging has caused mountain slopes to become more prone to erosion even in areas that are no longer logged and have seen secondary forest growth abandoned logging roads pose a serious erosive threat Grazing of livestock has also degraded grasslands and exposed soils to runoff This has resulted in river channels becoming clogged and confined by sediment harming salmon and steelhead populations by burying gravel bars used by these fish for spawning 31 80 Along the South Fork this problem has been exacerbated by the inherently unstable rocks and soils of the Franciscan formation causing mass wasting events that dump sediment into streams nbsp Lewiston Dam blocks fish migration to the upper Trinity River The Trinity River Fish Hatchery is located below the dam After the Trinity and Lewiston Dams were complete the Bureau of Reclamation did not adhere to the water export limits set in the project s authorization diverting 72 percent of the total river flow 64 and as much as 90 percent at certain times 63 On the main stem dam construction has greatly reduced the capacity of the river to wash away excess sediment The annual chinook salmon run has dropped by almost 80 percent since the 1950s 78 In 2002 65 000 adult salmon perished in a fish kill on the lower Trinity and Klamath rivers the fish were mostly of Trinity stock 81 The Trinity River Division has also indirectly caused environmental impacts in other parts of California Because no aqueduct or pipeline linking to the Imperial Valley or Colorado Basin was ever built Trinity River water was and still is used in the Central Valley for irrigation Most of it was used to develop new irrigation in the 600 000 acre 240 000 ha Westlands Water District on the western side of the San Joaquin Valley 82 which contains soils laced with salt and selenium 81 In the 1980s water run off from the Westlands district contributed to the highly publicized contamination of Kesterson Reservoir part of the agricultural drainage system and a significant refuge for birds and wildlife 83 After the completion of Lewiston Dam in 1963 the Bureau of Reclamation constructed the Trinity River Fish Hatchery to raise young steelhead coho and chinook salmon 84 The primary purpose of the hatchery was to compensate for the loss of 109 miles 175 km of anadromous fish habitat above Lewiston Dam The hatchery is operated by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to produce returns of 7 500 coho 6 000 spring chinook 70 000 fall chinook and 22 000 steelhead each year 85 In 2014 the California Fish Hatchery Review Project found that Trinity Hatchery raised coho were out competing wild stocks The hatchery has since been required to carefully time releases of young fish in order to reduce the risk of competition 86 Restoration efforts edit nbsp Volunteers with the Bureau of Land Management board kayaks to collect garbage from the river and its banks in 2022 After an environmental impact statement in 1991 the Bureau of Reclamation was required to make greater releases to the Trinity River below Lewiston Dam On December 19 2000 the Department of the Interior signed a Record of Decision ROD officially re allocating Central Valley Project water for environmental purposes This modified flow regime officially began in water year 2005 87 Prior to this annual releases to the Trinity River ranged from 150 to 300 cubic feet per second 4 2 to 8 5 m3 s or about 109 000 to 217 000 acre feet 134 000 000 to 268 000 000 m3 each year with the exception of occasional flood water discharges The ROD increases the minimum dam release to 368 600 acre feet 0 4547 km3 or about 510 cubic feet per second 14 m3 s even in critically dry years with even greater releases made during years of normal and above average precipitation These restrictions would reduce the Trinity River diversions about 28 percent on average however the impacts on the Central Valley Project as a whole would be far less only about 1 4 percent In addition the project will periodically release high flows up to 11 000 cubic feet per second 310 m3 s to simulate historic flooding and sediment transport conditions 23 In 2015 Humboldt County won a lawsuit against the Westlands Water District for an extra 50 000 acre feet 62 000 000 m3 of water from the Trinity River for in stream flows Previously the Bureau of Reclamation had included this sum in the water released for fishery management Although this means more water for the Trinity River no provision was made for commensurately reducing Central Valley Project water diversions increasing the risk that Trinity Lake could be drained to dead pool in drought years 81 Trinity River restoration flows 23 Water yeartype Trinity Riverrelease Trinity Releasevolume Max CVPdiversion Pct flowreleasedto river Critically Dry 509 ft3 s 14 m3 s 368 600 acre ft 0 45 km3 85 400 acre ft 0 11 km3 81 Dry 625 ft3 s 18 m3 s 452 600 acre ft 0 56 km3 358 400 acre ft 0 44 km3 56 Normal 892 ft3 s 25 m3 s 646 500 acre ft 0 80 km3 459 100 acre ft 0 56 km3 58 Wet 968 ft3 s 27 m3 s 701 000 acre ft 0 86 km3 900 000 acre ft 1 11 km3 44 Extremely Wet 1 125 ft3 s 32 m3 s 815 200 acre ft 1 01 km3 1 525 800 acre ft 1 88 km3 35 Construction crews have also worked to rehabilitate the river channel below the dam by clearing out mining debris and excess brush However these activities have been criticized by some environmental groups as too heavy handed 88 The California Water Impact Network stated channel rehabilitation was an activity equivalent to a clear cut on a Wild and Scenic River Bulldozing of the riverbanks to clear space for juvenile salmon habitat has harmed steelhead spawning grounds impacted public access and allowed the spread of invasive plant species 89 Between 2005 and 2011 restoration work cost a total of 36 million 88 Recreation edit nbsp Fly fishing on the Trinity River The Trinity River and many of its tributaries have been part of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System since 1981 The main stem is designated from a point 100 yards 91 m below Lewiston Dam to the confluence with the Klamath River The North Fork and New River are designated from the boundary of the Trinity Alps Wilderness to the mouth and the South Fork from State Route 36 to the mouth A total of 44 miles 71 km are classified as wild 39 miles 63 km as scenic and 120 miles 190 km as recreational 90 The South Fork is the largest river in California without a single dam along its length 91 Although fish populations have declined since the early 1900s fishing for salmon and steelhead has recovered on many parts of the river 92 The Trinity is known as one of the best steelhead streams in the western United States and is home to both wild and hatchery fish 93 111 116 The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment OEHHA has developed a safe eating advisory for fish caught in the Trinity River based on levels of mercury or PCBs found in local species 94 95 The Trinity is a popular whitewater rafting and kayaking river Dam releases for fish restoration have incidentally increased the amount of water available for boating year round The river has three main whitewater runs all known for their scenery and wildlife The Pigeon Point section alongside Highway 299 contains Class II III beginner to intermediate rapids 96 Below the takeout at Cedar Flat the Trinity flows through the extremely hazardous Class V Burnt Ranch Gorge which was first run in 1971 by three kayakers one of whom died of a heart attack soon after finishing the run due to the arduous work of portaging many rapids This gave the area a bad reputation for many years it was not until 1983 that commercial trips began on this section of the river 97 The lower Trinity much of which flows through the Hoopa Valley Reservation is a Class II river with gentler and lower gradient despite having a greater volume of water flow 98 Recreational gold panning is another pastime along the Trinity However many streams in the area are located on private property or are part of existing placer mining claims 99 Claims in the area are administered by the Bureau of Land Management BLM 55 Because the Trinity River flows through a patchwork of private and public lands the BLM and Forest Service maintain 14 designated locations for river access between Lewiston and Pigeon Point just below Helena 100 See also editList of rivers of CaliforniaReferences edit a b c d Trinity River Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior January 19 1981 Boundary Descriptions and Names of Regions Subregions Accounting Units and Cataloging Units United States Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 a b c d e USGS Gage 11530000 Trinity River at Hoopa CA Water Data Report 2013 National Water Information System U S Geological Survey 2013 Accessed 2017 09 30 Trinity Lake Boating Safety Information and Map PDF U S Forest Service 2014 Retrieved September 20 2016 a b c d USGS Topo Maps for United States Map Cartography by United States Geological Survey ACME Mapper Retrieved January 11 2016 Upper Trinity River Watershed Assessment Report Management and Action Plan PDF Trinity County Resource Conservation District March 2006 Retrieved September 20 2016 Shasta Trinity River Division Project U S Bureau of Reclamation October 1 2012 Archived from the original on September 28 2016 Retrieved December 14 2016 The Trinity River California Water Impact Network Archived from the original on March 25 2016 Retrieved December 8 2016 Mainstem Trinity River Watershed Analysis U S Bureau of Land Management Klamath Resource Information System 1995 Retrieved January 11 2016 a b c d e Krause Andreas July 1 2010 One Hundred and Fifty Years of Sediment Manipulation on the Trinity River PDF 2nd Joint Federal Interagency Conference Advisory Committee on Water Information Retrieved December 4 2016 Floods of December 1964 and January 1965 in the Western United States PDF Geological Survey Water Supply Paper 1866 A U S Geological Survey 1971 Retrieved December 8 2016 USGS Gage 11530000 on the Trinity River at Hoopa CA National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved December 8 2016 USGS Gage 11523200 on the Trinity River above Coffee Creek near Trinity Center CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 USGS Gage 11525500 on the Trinity River below Lewiston Dam at Lewiston CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 USGS Gage 11525655 on the Trinity River below Limekiln Gulch near Douglas City CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 USGS Gage 11525854 on the Trinity River at Douglas City CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 USGS Gage 11526250 on the Trinity River at Junction City CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 USGS Gage 11526400 on the Trinity River above the North Fork near Helena CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 USGS Gage 11527000 on the Trinity River near Burnt Ranch CA Instantaneous streamflow data National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 11 2016 a b c d Mainstem Trinity River Watershed Analysis PDF U S Forest Service December 1995 Retrieved September 20 2016 a b c Trinity River Watershed Management Area PDF North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board Watershed Planning Chapter California State Water Resources Control Board February 2005 Retrieved September 20 2016 a b c d Natural Resources and Hazards Humboldt 2015 General Plan Update County of Humboldt September 2002 Retrieved December 8 2016 a b c Trinity River Restoration Program PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation December 19 2000 Retrieved December 7 2016 Water Resources Humboldt County General Plan County of Humboldt Retrieved October 3 2016 Hoopa Valley Tribe Sociocultural Socioeconomics Effects Analysis Technical Report PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation July 2012 Retrieved December 13 2016 a b c Sawyer John O 2006 Northwest California A Natural History PDF University of California Press Retrieved September 27 2016 a b c d Trinity River Basin Geology Klamath Resource Information System Retrieved September 27 2016 Irwin William P 2010 Reconnaissance Geologic Map of the Hayfork 15 Quadrangle Trinity County California U S Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map 3119 U S Geological Survey Retrieved September 27 2016 Hotz Preston E 1971 Geology of Lode Gold Districts in the Klamath Mountains California and Oregon PDF Geological Survey Bulletin 1290 U S Geological Survey Retrieved September 27 2016 Snoke Arthur W Barnes Calvin G 2006 Geological Studies in the Klamath Mountains Province California and Oregon A Volume in Honor of William P Irwin Geological Society of America ISBN 0 8137 2410 4 a b Lewiston Dark Gulch Rehabilitation Project Geology Fluvial Geomorphology and Soils Trinity River Restoration Program U S Bureau of Reclamation November 2007 Retrieved September 27 2016 a b Formation of the Soils PDF Soil Survey of Mendocino County Eastern Part and Trinity County Southwestern Part California Natural Resources Conservation Service Retrieved September 27 2016 a b Trinity Alps Wilderness Management Plan Draft Environmental Impact Statement U S Forest Service August 1995 p 3 Whiskeytown Unit General Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement U S National Park Service 1999 p 61 a b Sturtevant William C 1978 Handbook Of North American Indians California Government Printing Office ISBN 0 16 004574 6 United States Department of Energy 1981 Cottonwood to Elverta No 3 Transmission Line Rehabilitation Project Shasta County Environmental Impact Statement Nestor Sandy 2004 Indian Placenames in America Vol 1 McFarland ISBN 0 7864 7167 0 Hupa Online Dictionary and Texts University of California Davis Retrieved December 3 2016 Curtis Edward S 2015 The North American Indian Volume 13 The Hupa The Yurok The Karok The Wiyot Tolowa and Tututni The Shasta The Achomawi The Klamath Native American Book Publishers LLC ISBN 978 0 40308 412 8 California Place Names of Indian Origin PDF American Archaeology and Ethnology Southern Oregon Digital Archives June 15 1916 Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2011 Retrieved September 30 2016 The Salmon Coast On The Water Smithsonian Institution Retrieved December 12 2016 Tsnungwe place names along the Trinity River a b c Waldman Carl 2014 Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1010 3 Native American Influences Trinity River Restoration Program Retrieved November 30 2016 Waldman Carl 2014 Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1010 3 a b c d Hoover Mildred Brooke 1990 Historic Spots in California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 1734 6 Barbour Barton H 2011 Jedediah Smith No Ordinary Mountain Man University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 8324 4 a b c d e Trinity Alps and Vicinity Including Whiskeytown Russian Wilderness and Castle Crags Areas Wilderness Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 89997 580 1 a b c New River Backcountry PDF U S Forest Service June 2012 Retrieved December 3 2016 Trinity Alps Gold Rush California Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved December 3 2016 a b c d e f The Search for Gold in Weaverville PDF Trinity County Resource Conservation District Retrieved December 3 2016 Dimensions of the Cheops pyramid Khufu s pyramid Building the Great Pyramid 2006 Retrieved December 4 2016 The Sawyer Decision Legal Action Taken To Stop Hydraulic Mining Malakoff Diggins State Historic Park Retrieved December 12 2016 Hydraulic Mining in Northern California Mining American 55 1 335 1907 a b Mining Information Weaverville and Big Bar Stations PDF U S Forest Service Retrieved December 12 2016 Juillerat Lee September 2 2010 At home in the woods Herald and News Retrieved December 12 2016 U S Fish and Wildlife Service November 1980 Environmental Impact Statement on the Management of River Flows to Mitigate the Loss of the Anadromous Fishery of the Trinity River California U S Government Printing Office Judge Halts Logging Along Trinity River Los Angeles Times Associated Press November 23 1988 Retrieved December 12 2016 Kelly R K December 10 1988 Land of Many Uses and Abuses Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 7 2017 Stene Eric A 1996 Trinity Division Central Valley Project PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation Archived from the original PDF on October 9 2016 Retrieved December 5 2016 Reisner Marc 1993 Cadillac Desert Penguin ISBN 0 14 017824 4 Pacific Southwest Water Plan PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation January 1964 Retrieved December 12 2016 a b Diversion Facilities amp Operations Trinity River Restoration Program Retrieved December 12 2016 a b Summary of Volume and Diversion of Trinity River Water PDF CALFED Bay Delta Program Retrieved December 12 2016 Bezis Jason A August 7 2014 Death of Sen Clair Engle Half century later Red Bluff Daily News Retrieved December 14 2016 Senate Report 105 70 105th Congress United States Congress September 2 1997 Retrieved December 14 2016 Stene Eric A 1996 Trinity Division Central Valley Project PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation Archived from the original on September 28 2016 Retrieved December 14 2016 Trinity Powerplant U S Bureau of Reclamation April 4 2011 Archived from the original on June 2 2016 Retrieved December 12 2016 Judge Francis Carr Powerplant U S Bureau of Reclamation May 13 2009 Archived from the original on September 28 2016 Retrieved December 12 2016 Spring Creek Powerplant U S Bureau of Reclamation May 13 2009 Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved December 12 2016 USGS Gage 11525430 Judge Francis Carr Powerplant near French Gulch CA Annual Water Data Report 2013 PDF National Water Information System U S Geological Survey Retrieved January 12 2016 Hartridge Anne M Salmon Medicine Federal Trust the ESA and the Trinity River PDF University of California Davis Retrieved December 13 2016 Jones Carolyn September 12 2011 Anger lingers over towns flooded by Trinity Dam SFGate Retrieved December 12 2016 a b c Upper Trinity River Watershed Analysis PDF U S Forest Service March 2005 Retrieved December 12 2016 Shasta Trinity National Forest College of the Siskiyous Retrieved December 12 2016 Mammals of the Shasta Trinity National Forest PDF U S Forest Service Retrieved December 12 2016 William H Ashley Jedediah S Smith Harrison G Rogers 1918 The Ashley Smith explorations and the discovery of a central route to the Pacific p 246 Retrieved July 31 2011 a b Diversion Impacts Trinity River Restoration Program Retrieved December 12 2016 Trinity River Salmon Snapshots The Nature Conservancy Retrieved December 12 2016 Upper Trinity River Population PDF Final SONCC Coho Recovery Plan National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 2014 Retrieved December 12 2016 a b c Stokely Tom February 2015 Federal Legal Opinion Favors Humboldt County s Claim on Trinity Water Northcoast Environmental Center Retrieved October 3 2016 Stokely Tom The Trinity River A Triumph of Science over Politics For Now PDF County of Trinity Retrieved December 12 2016 The Trinity River A Trail of Broken Promises PDF AquAlliance November 29 2012 Retrieved December 12 2016 Trinity River Hatchery California Department of Fish and Wildlife Retrieved December 12 2016 History of Trinity River Hatchery California Department of Fish and Wildlife Retrieved December 12 2016 Historic Agreement Reforms Trinity River Fish Hatchery Environmental Protection Information Center April 28 2014 Retrieved December 12 2016 Curtis Jennifer A Guerrero Timothy M May 13 2015 Geomorphic Mapping to Support River Restoration on the Trinity River Downstream from Lewiston Dam California 1980 2011 U S Geological Survey Retrieved December 7 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Arthur Damon December 1 2011 Trinity River advocates denounce restoration network claims project poses harm to salmon Redding Record Searchlight Retrieved December 7 2016 Trinity River Restoration Program Brought into Question in Coalition Letter Environmental Protection Information Center January 23 2014 Retrieved December 7 2016 Trinity River California National Wild and Scenic Rivers System Retrieved December 7 2016 South Fork Trinity River Population PDF Final SONCC Coho Recovery Plan National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration September 2014 Retrieved December 7 2016 Are Steelhead amp Salmon Returning To The Trinity River California Trout December 7 2011 Retrieved December 12 2016 O Brien Chip 2009 California s Best Fly Fishing Premier Streams and Rivers from Northern California to the Eastern Sierra Stackpole Books ISBN 978 1 934753 03 3 California Fish Advisory Map OEHHA Retrieved June 13 2018 Admin OEHHA December 30 2014 Trinity River upstream of Trinity Lake OEHHA Retrieved June 13 2018 Boating on the Trinity Wild amp Scenic River PDF U S Forest Service June 2012 Retrieved December 12 2016 Trinity River Burnt Ranch Gorge California Creeks Retrieved December 12 2016 Whitewater amp Scenery California Whitewater Retrieved December 12 2016 Gold Panning When Trinity Turned to Gold Visit Trinity Retrieved December 12 2016 Wild and Scenic Trinity River Public Access Map PDF U S Bureau of Land Management Retrieved December 14 2016 Notes edit Source elevation derived from GNIS source coordinates 1 using Geoplaner Further reading editPalmer Tim 2012 Field Guide to California Rivers University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 95219 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trinity River California BOR Trinity River Restoration Program Trinity River Adaptive Management Working Group NPS Trinity Wild and Scenic River California Department of Water Resources Trinity River and Tributaries Up to Date Flow Data Trinity River Rafting TrinityRiver Org Trinity Wild and Scenic River BLM page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trinity River California amp oldid 1214179499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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