Russian River (California)

The Russian River (Kashaya: Ashokawna, Russian: Рашен-Ривер (Rašen-Rivyer), lit. 'русская река (Russkaya Ryeka)') is a southward-flowing river that drains 1,485 sq mi (3,850 km2)[4] of Sonoma and Mendocino counties in Northern California. With an annual average discharge of approximately 1,600,000 acre feet (2.0 km3),[6] it is the second-largest river (after the Sacramento River) flowing through the nine-county Greater San Francisco Bay Area, with a mainstem 110 mi (180 km) long.

Russian River
Slavyanka River
Rio San Ygnacio, Rio San Ignacio[1]
The estuary of the Russian River, north of Bodega Bay
Native nameAshokawna or Bidapte
Location
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionSonoma County, Mendocino County
CitiesUkiah, Healdsburg
Physical characteristics
SourceLaughlin Range
  location5 mi (8 km) east of Willits, California
  coordinates39°23′0″N 123°14′18″W[2]
  elevation1,960 ft (600 m)[3]
MouthPacific Ocean
  location
Jenner, California
  coordinates
38°27′2″N 123°7′46″W[2]
  elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Length110 mi (180 km)[4]
Basin size1,485 sq mi (3,850 km2)[4]
Discharge 
  locationGuerneville[5]
  average2,261 cu ft/s (64.0 m3/s)[5]
  minimum0.75 cu ft/s (0.021 m3/s)
  maximum102,000 cu ft/s (2,900 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftMark West Creek, Maacama Creek, Green Valley Creek, Big Sulphur Creek
  rightDry Creek, Austin Creek, Fife Creek
Russian River
River source
Corral Creek
Fisher Creek
Mariposa Creek
Rocky Creek
Redwood Valley
Salt Hollow Creek
Forsythe Creek
Lake Van Arsdale
Eel River transfers
Potter Valley
SR 20 Calpella
York Creek
Lake Mendocino
East Fork confluence
Hensley Creek
Howard Creek
Ackerman Creek
Sulphur Creek
Orrs Creek
Ukiah
SR 222 Talmage
Robinson Creek
Howell Creek
Morrison Creek
Parsons Creek
McNab Creek
Crawford Creek
Dooley Creek
SR 175 Hopland
Feliz Creek
US 101
Pieta Creek
Frog Woman Rock
Commisky Creek
Edwards Creek
US 101
Ash Creek
Oat Valley Creek
Big Sulphur Creek
Cloverdale
Cloverdale Creek
Porterfield Creek
Icaria Creek
Barrelli Creek
Crocker Creek
Gill Creek
Asti
SR 128 Geyserville
Miller Creek
Peterson Creek
Gird Creek
Alexander Valley Road
Sausal Creek
Maacama Creek
Lake Sonoma
Northwestern Pacific RR
Healdsburg
US 101 Healdsburg
Dry Creek
Riverfront Regional Park
Porter Creek
Wohler Road
Mark West Creek
Green Valley Creek
River Road
Hobson Creek
Korbel
Rio Nido
SR 116 Guerneville
Pocket Canyon
Fife Creek
Livereau Creek
Hulbert Creek
Smith Creek
Monte Rio
Dutch Bill Creek
Austin Creek
Duncans Mills
Freezeout Creek
Orrs Creek
Sheephouse Creek
Willow Creek
SR 1 Jenner
Goat Rock Beach

Course

The Russian River downstream of Duncans Mills

The Russian River springs from the Laughlin Range about 5 mi (8 km) east of Willits in Mendocino County. It flows generally southward to Redwood Valley, then past Calpella, where it is bordered by U.S. Route 101, to join the East Fork Russian River just below Lake Mendocino.

From there the Russian River flows south, past Ukiah through the Ukiah Valley and Hopland through the Sanel Valley, and crosses into Sonoma County just north of Cloverdale. Closely paralleled by U.S. Route 101, it descends into the Alexander Valley, where it is joined by Big Sulphur Creek. It flows south past Cloverdale, Asti, and Geyserville.

East of Healdsburg, Maacama Creek joins the Russian River. After it makes a series of sweeping bends, the Healdsburg Memorial Bridge carries Old Redwood Highway over the river just upstream of U.S. Route 101's Healdsburg crossing. It receives water from Lake Sonoma via Dry Creek. The river turns westward, where it is spanned by the Wohler Bridge, and it is joined by Mark West Creek north of Forestville, followed by Green Valley Creek to the south. The river passes Rio Nido and Guerneville. In that area, State Route 116 parallels the river, bordering it past Guernewood Park and Monte Rio.

Austin Creek enters from the north before the River passes through Duncans Mills. State Route 1 crosses over the river before it flows into the Pacific Ocean between Jenner and Goat Rock Beach. The Russian River estuary is recognized for protection by the California Bays and Estuaries Policy.[7] The mouth is about 60 mi (100 km) north of the San Francisco Bay's Golden Gate bridge.

The lower Russian River is a popular spring, summer, and fall destination for navigation and recreation. It is very safe at that time for swimming and boating, with a gentle current.[8] The river is dangerous in the winter, with swift current and muddy water.

Geology

The geographer R. S. Holway wrote of the Russian River in his 1917 paper "The Russian River: A Characteristic Stream of the California Coast Ranges".[9] Originally, the Russian River was one of several rivers draining westward from the Mayacamas Mountains through the Mendocino Plateau to the sea, a region lifted up by tectonic forces. The Navarro River drained from the Cobb Mountain area, while the Russian River drained from the Mt. St. Helena area. Being at a lower elevation, the Russian River began cutting north into the drainage area of the Navarro River. Eroding up a fault line in Alexander Valley, the Russian River intersected the Navarro River just north of Cloverdale. This resulted in the stream capture of Big Sulphur Creek (formerly the upper Navarro River) and the north fork of the Navarro River, going north to Hopland and to Ukiah. The high valleys were eroded into rocky canyons for ten miles north of Cloverdale and for five miles east of Cloverdale.

After establishing a connection to Clear Lake, the Russian River was beheaded from Clear Lake by a slide (at Cow Mountain, east of Ukiah). Now Clear Lake flows into the Sacramento River.[10] The river incised a canyon into Fitch Mountain at an early time, before land levels were eroded to their present levels.[11] The Russian River was prevented from flowing south into San Pablo Bay, due to a 113-foot high ridge at Cotati.[12] Guerneville is built on an abandoned meander of the river. Near Guerneville, another meander cut short Smith Creek.[13]

The Mendocino Plateau is a part of the Franciscan Assemblage.

History

An Autumnal Sunset on the Russian River Evening Glow by William Keith, 1878

The river was originally known among the Southern Pomo as Ashokawna (ʼaš:oʼkʰawna), "east water place" or "water to the east",[14] and as Bidapte, "big river".[15] Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo and his expedition may have made it as far north as the Russian River in November 1542, before storms forced them to turn back south towards Monterey. The earliest Slavic name for the river, Slavyanka, appears on a Russian-American Company chart dated 1817.[16] In 1827 the Spanish called it the San Ygnacio,[1] and in 1843 the Spanish land grant referred to it as Rio Grande.[17]

The river takes its current name from Russian Ivan Kuskov of the Russian-American Company, who explored the river in the early 19th century and established the Fort Ross colony 10 mi (16 km) northwest of its mouth. The Russians called it the Slavyanka River, meaning "Slav River".[1] They established three ranches near Fort Ross, one of which, the Kostromitinov Ranch, was along the Russian River near the mouth of Willow Creek.[18] The redwoods that lined its banks drew loggers to the river in the late 19th century.

According to the USGS, variant names of the Russian River include Misallaako, Rio Ruso, Shabaikai, and Slavyanka.[2]

River modifications

A portion of the Eel River is diverted to headwaters of the Russian River in Potter Valley, via a scheme known as the Potter Valley Project. The Sonoma County Water Agency[19] draws drinking water from the Russian River for sale to several hundred thousand residents of Sonoma, Mendocino, and northern Marin counties.[20] Santa Rosa's Laguna Wastewater Treatment Plant treats sewage from several communities to tertiary standards and returns some of it to the river by way of the Laguna de Santa Rosa.

Water transferred from the Eel River and released from Lake Mendocino flows through the Russian River channel to withdrawal points in Sonoma County. Although this method of transport supports aquatic and riparian zone habitats, it is vulnerable to chemical contamination from transportation accidents where the river is in close proximity to highway 101 and Northwestern Pacific Railroad transportation corridors in locations like the canyon between Cloverdale and Hopland. This vulnerability was demonstrated in March 1982 when a tank car of formaldehyde was vandalized in Ukiah. Emergency response personnel were able to clean up approximately half of the 21,000 US gallons (79,000 l) spilled, and a fortuitous combination of Lake Mendocino reservoir inventory and late winter storms helped flush the remainder through the river and into the ocean before local water storage inventories were exhausted.[21]

The Russian River reached flood stage of 32 feet (9.8 m) at Guerneville about five times per decade through the last half of the 20th century. Historic flood peaks were 49.5 feet (15.1 m) in February 1986, 48 feet (15 m) in January 1995, 47.6 feet (14.5 m) in December 1955, 47.3 feet (14.4 m) in December 1964, and 46.9 feet (14.3 m) in February 1940. Through effective use of Lake Mendocino and Lake Sonoma flood capacity the river has exceeded flood stage at Guerneville less frequently in the 21st century,[22] but in late February 2019 it flooded to levels comparable to 1986.[23]

Ecology

White Sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus), almost 8 feet long, caught in 1998 in the Russian River's "Hacienda Hole" in Guerneville, California.

The river provides wildlife habitat including warm and cold freshwater habitat for fish migration and spawning.[8] Historically it is interesting as one of two Northern California coastal rivers mentioned in the early nineteenth century by Russian explorer K. T. Khlebnikov as hosting sturgeon, presumably White sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus), along with the Pajaro River.[24] Khlebnikov stated in his "1820 Travel Notes", "Mr. Kuskov had sent two baidarkas to the Slavyanka River to catch sturgeon, and they returned today with ten fish...the largest one exceeding two arshins (4.67 feet) long".[25] Moyle's Inland Fishes of California states that there were historic runs of white, but not green, sturgeon in the Russian River.[26] White sturgeon are the largest freshwater fish in the United States.

The Russian River is the largest river in the Central California Coast Steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) Distinct population segment. Natural waterfalls and the two major dams, Warm Springs (built in 1982) and Coyote (built in 1959), have isolated anadromous steelhead from its non-oceangoing rainbow trout form above the impassable barriers. Recent genetic studies on steelhead collected at 20 different sites both above and below passage barriers in the watershed found that despite the fact that 30 million hatchery trout were stocked in the river from 1911 to 1925, the steelhead remain of native and not hatchery stock.[27]

Until recently, most reviews indicated that Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) were always scarce on the Russian River. However, in 2007, the Sonoma County Water Agency completed a comprehensive re-evaluation of historical records, coupled with a 5-year monitoring program using underwater cameras at two fish ladders just north of Forestville. They found that Chinook always were, and still are, "a relatively abundant, widely distributed, and naturally self-sustaining population". The authors found historic information dating to 1881 suggesting the presence of an ancestral population, and their genetic analysis found the Chinook both above and below barriers to fish passage to be of native, and not hatchery stock.[28]

In 2001 the Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) had dwindled to less than four returning spawners per year. These low numbers were the catalyst for the Russian River Coho Salmon Captive Broodstock Program, a recovery effort in which offspring from hatchery-reared adults are released into the river system. In 2011, biologists estimate that more than 190 adult coho may have returned to the Russian River watershed, beginning with early storms in October and peaking in December.[29] High priority tributaries for restoration of stream flows and habitat for Coho include Dutch Bill, Grape, Green Valley, Mark West and Mill Creeks.[30]

Similarly, early twentieth-century naturalists were skeptical that California Golden beaver (Castor canadensis subauratus) were extant in the coastal streams of the Bay Area.[31] However, the Russian-American Company's Ivan Kuskov sailed into Bodega Bay in 1809 on the Kodiak and, after exploring 50 miles of the Russian River, returned to Novo Arkhangelsk, Alaska (Sitka), with beaver skins and over 2,000 sea otter (Enhydra lutris) pelts.[32] The Russians' stated reason for establishing a settlement in Alta California was, "The rich, fertile soil [and] the abundance of seal, otter and beaver were the principal factors which favored this colonization."[33] An 1816 report by the Russian-American Company's Board of Directors said that it was establishing a settlement to introduce agriculture.(page 33, After December 16, 1813: A report to Emperor Alexander I from the Russian American Company Council, concerning trade with California and the establishment of Fort Ross)[34] Before establishing a southern colony at Fort Ross, the Russian-American Company contracted with American ships beginning in 1806, providing them with Aleuts and their baidarkas (kayaks) to hunt otter on the coast of Spanish California.[35] Hudson's Bay Company's Alexander R. McLeod reported in 1829, "The Country to the northward of Bodega is said to be rich in Beaver and no encouragement given to the Indians to hunt."[36] The fur trapper Ewing Young, led an expedition up Putah Creek to Clear Lake and on to the Mendocino County Coast in March, 1833.[37] James Weeks, a member of Young's 1833 fur brigade wrote: "They broke up all the beaver lodges on the lake, I believe the finest and largest beaver we caught there, we arrived at the Russian River and pitched camp sent out, trappers found signs set traps caught beavers..."[38] This historical observer record is consistent with the Southern Pomo, who inhabited the lower half of the Russian River, having a word for beaver ṱ’ek:e and beavers in their "Coyote Stories".[39] In 1881 the Sacramento Daily Union newspaper reported, "Beavers are being trapped near Healdsburg" (placing them again on the Russian River).[40]

The Russian River State Marine Reserve and Russian River State Marine Conservation Area protect the Russian River Estuary. Like underwater parks, these marine protected areas help conserve ocean and freshwater wildlife and marine ecosystems.

Russian River Valley

View of the Russian River and the Russian River Valley

The river provides groundwater recharge and a water supply for agriculture.[8] The river's floodplain includes many vineyards, and an area of the Russian River Valley was approved as an American Viticultural Area in 1983 and enlarged in 2006.[41] It produces Chardonnay and Pinot noir wines in addition to other wine varietals, and is home to many small and several large commercial wineries.

gollark: This is nonsense. Everyone knows that perfection was only achieved by the JS type system.
gollark: C is not renowned for having a good type system.
gollark: It's always annoying when I combinate a parser but it goes into an infinite loop because I have no idea what I'm doing.
gollark: Not the programming language theory. Probably. The other thing.
gollark: That sounds like a mental health issue of some kind.

See also

References

  1. Erwin G. Gudde, William Bright (2004). California Place Names: The Origin and Etymology of Current Geographical Names. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 323. ISBN 9780520242173. Retrieved June 27, 2010.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  2. "Russian River". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  3. Google Earth elevation for source coordinates
  4. "Water Supply". Sonoma County Water Agency. Retrieved February 14, 2010.
  5. "USGS Gage #11467000 on the Russian River near Guerneville, CA" (PDF). National Water Information System. U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved April 28, 2011.
  6. Langridge, Ruth; Christian-Smith, Juliet; Lohse, Kathleen A. (2006). "Access and Resilience: Analyzing the Construction of Social Resilience to the Threat of Water Scarcity" (PDF). Ecology and Society. 11 (2): 18. doi:10.5751/ES-01825-110218.
  7. State Water Resources Control Board Water Quality Control Policy for the Enclosed Bays and Estuaries of California (1974) State of California
  8. State of California Water Quality Control Plan North Coastal Basin 1B July 1975 p.13
  9. Ruliff Stephen Holway (1917). The Russian River: A Characteristic Stream of the California Coast Ranges. University of California Press. pp. 12.
  10. Holway, page 13
  11. Holway, pages 20-21
  12. Holway, pages 25-26
  13. Holway, page 29
  14. Oswalt, Robert (1981). Southern Pomo Word List and Map of Native Place Names in the Warm Springs Dam Area. San Francisco, CA: US Army Corps of Engineers.
  15. Oswalt, Robert; Peri, David W.; Fredrickson, Vera-Mae (1979). Language Study. San Francisco, CA: US Army Corps of Engineers.
  16. Hayes, Derek (2007). Historical Atlas of California. Los Angeles, London: University of California Press, Berkeley. ISBN 978-0-520-25258-5.
  17. Praetzellis, Mary; Praetzellis, Adrian; Stewart, Suzanne B. (1985). "Before Warm Springs Dam: A History of the Lake Sonoma Area" (PDF). US Army Corps of Engineers. p. 28. Retrieved November 14, 2008.
  18. Schneider, Tsim D. (2006). "New Thoughts on the Kostromitinov Ranch, Sonoma County, California" (PDF). Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology. 19: 36–39. ISSN 0897-0947. OCLC 17396569. Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  19. "Sonoma Water - Home Page". www.sonomawater.org. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  20. "Sonoma County Water Agency Structure". Archived from the original on November 20, 2008. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  21. "Formaldehyde released down Russian River". Lodi News-Sentinel. Lodi, California. March 31, 1982. p. 4.
  22. "Historic Crests". Russian River at Guerneville. National Weather Service. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  23. Fimrite, Peter (February 27, 2019). "Eye of the storm: Life on the flooded, deserted island of Guerneville". San Francisco Chronicle.
  24. K. T. Khlebnikov (1940). "Memoirs of California". Pacific Historical Review. 9 (3): 307–336. doi:10.2307/3632910. JSTOR 3632910.
  25. Kiril T. Khlebnikov, translated by John Bisk and edited by Leon Shur (1990). The Khlebnikov Archive: Unpublished Journal (1800–1837) and Travel Notes (1820, 1822 and 1824). University of Alaska Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-912006-42-0.
  26. Peter B. Moyle (2002). Inland Fishes of California. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-520-22754-5. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
  27. Kristy Deiner, John Carlos Garza, Robert Coey, Derek J. Girman (2007). "Population structure and genetic diversity of trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) above and below natural and man-made barriers in the Russian River, California" (PDF). Conservation Genetics. 8 (2): 437–454. doi:10.1007/s10592-006-9183-0. hdl:10211.1/1550.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  28. Shawn D. Chase, David J. Manning, David G. Cook, Sean K. White (2007). "Historic Accounts, Recent Abundance, and Current Distribution of Threatened Chinook Salmon in the Russian River, California" (PDF). California Fish and Game: 130–148. Retrieved June 11, 2011.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  29. Paul Olin, Christina S. Johnson (March 23, 2011). Endangered Coho Salmon Return to Russian River (Report). California Sea Grant. Retrieved June 12, 2011.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  30. "Russian River Coho Water Resources Partnership". Retrieved June 12, 2011.
  31. Tappe, Donald T. (1942). "The Status of Beavers in California". Game Bulletin No. 3.
  32. Thompson, R. A. (1896). The Russian Settlement in California Known as Fort Ross, Founded 1812...Abandoned 1841: Why They Came and Why They Left. Santa Rosa, California: Sonoma Democrat Publishing Company. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-559-89342-1. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  33. T. Blok, translated by St. Petersburg (September 1933). "The Russian Colonies in California: A Russian Version". California Historical Quarterly. 12 (3): 189–190. JSTOR 25178215.
  34. Dmytryshin, Basil; Crownhart-Vaughan, E.A.P.; Vaughan, Thomas (1989). The Russian American Colonies 1789–1867. Portland: Oregon Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-87595-147-8.
  35. Adele Ogden (1975). The California sea otter trade, 1784–1848. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-520-02806-7. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  36. Nunis, Doyce (1968). A. R. McLeod, Esq. to John McLoughlin, Esq. Dated Fort Vancouver 15 Feby. 1830, in The Hudson's Bay Company's First Fur Brigade to the Sacramento Valley: Alexander McLeod's 1829 Hunt. Fair Oaks, California: The Sacramento Book Collectors Club. p. 34.
  37. Kenneth L. Holmes (1967). Ewing Young: Master Trapper. Portland, Oregon: Binsford and Mort, Publishers. p. 87.
  38. J. W. Weeks (1877). James W. Weeks reminiscences. Uvas Creek, California.
  39. Herbert W. Luthin (2002). Surviving through the days: translations of Native California stories and Songs. University of California Press. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-520-22270-0. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  40. "Pacific Coast Items". Sacramento Daily Union. 1881. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
  41. "Russian River Valley Winegrowers Association". Archived from the original on September 25, 2008. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.