San Pablo Creek

San Pablo Creek is an 18.7-mile-long (30.1 km)[3] creek in Contra Costa County, California, United States, which drains the canyon or valley between the San Pablo Ridge and the Sobrante Ridge, parts of the Pacific Coast Ranges east of San Francisco Bay.

San Pablo Creek
San Pablo Creek just behind the El Sobrante Library
Location of the mouth of San Pablo Creek in California
Native nameSpanish: Arroyo de San Pablo[1]
Location
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionContra Costa County
Physical characteristics
SourceMulholland Hill
  locationOrinda, California
  coordinates37°52′1″N 122°8′58″W[2]
  elevation750 ft (230 m)
MouthSan Pablo Bay
  location
west of San Pablo, California
  coordinates
37°58′35″N 122°23′0″W[2]
  elevation
0 ft (0 m)[2]
Basin size41 sq mi (110 km2)

The creek runs from the southeast to the northwest, originating near Orinda and flowing into San Pablo Bay. It drains one of the largest watersheds in the East Bay, comprising some 41 square miles (110 km2).[4] The creek has 34 named tributaries.[5] The creek was dammed in 1919,[6] forming the San Pablo Reservoir. Briones Reservoir, constructed in 1964, dams the Bear Creek tributary.[5] San Pablo Reservoir essentially splits the creek in two, with about half of the creek and its related feeder creeks on either side of the artificial lake; for much of its course, it runs parallel to Wildcat Creek, which drains from Wildcat Canyon, the next valley to the west.[4][5] The East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) gets less than 10% of its water from the creek.[7]

Overview

The tributaries are as follows: Appian Creek, Baden Creek, Barn Creek, Bear Creek, Big Oak Creek, Briones Reservoir, Cascade Creek, Castro Creek, Coal Mine Creek, Clark Creek, Dutra Creek, El Toyonal Creek, Greenridge Creek, Inspiration Creek, Kennedy Creek, La Colina Creek, Lauterwasser Creek, Leastrot Creek, Lila Creek, Miner Creek, Newell Creek, Oak Creek, Oursan Creek, Overhill Creek, Rose Creek, Russel Creek, San Pablo Reservoir, Sather Creek, Schoolhouse Creek, Siesta Valley Creek, Tarry Creek, Tin House Creek, Wagner Creek, Wilkie Creek and Wire Ranch Creek.[5]

The creek is helped by many community organizations. The city of San Pablo has organized cleanups,[8] as has the Friends of Orinda Creeks.[5] The San Pablo Watershed Neighbors Education and Resources Society (SPAWNERS) goes further than just garbage and weed cleanups and includes restoration efforts and watershed studies. SPAWNERS has built and maintained a creek bank restoration site and California native plant demonstration gardens at the El Sobrante Library adjacent to downtown El Sobrante since 2000. SPAWNERS also maintains a creek re-vegetation site at the El Sobrante Boys and Girls Club as well as an outdoor classroom project along Wilkie Creek (a tributary of San Pablo) behind De Anza High School.[9] The damming of the creek has limited threatened steelhead spawning sites but has allowed it to continue to survive there.[6] Native Ohlone shell mounds were once found along the creek, especially near San Pablo Bay.[7]

San Pablo Creek's delta, located within the city limits of Richmond, is known as San Pablo Creek Marsh, and its 300 acres (1.2 km2) are filled with an abundance of wildlife, including endangered species such as the California clapper rail, the salt marsh harvest mouse, the threatened black rail, the salt marsh wandering shrew, and the San Pablo vole. Other animals present are the shy salt marsh harvest sparrows which live in the sloughs, while salt marsh yellow throats live among the willows that grow along the transition between fresh creek water and salty bay water.[4]

History

The San Pablo Canyon through which the creek flows was in the early 19th century an open grazing area shared by adjoining Mexican ranch owners. In the latter years of the 19th century, a narrow gauge railroad, the California and Nevada, ran down the canyon as far as Orinda. The company intended to construct their line past Orinda all the way to the mining districts of Nevada, but the railroad was plagued by washouts in the canyon every winter, and was relegated to serving weekend picnickers traveling from the cities on San Francisco Bay. The line through the canyon was abandoned upon the acquisition of the California and Nevada by the Santa Fe Railroad.

gollark: Maybe don't do those then?
gollark: I say "hate" in a loose sense, he was probably just annoyed.
gollark: Well, part of the reason, probably.
gollark: That's why Plethora doesn't have the power system any more.
gollark: I made squid hate me with that trick!

See also

Notes

  1. Annual Report of the General Land Office. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1879. pp. 194–195.
  2. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: San Pablo Creek
  3. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed March 15, 2011
  4. Our Watershed Archived 2007-07-30 at the Wayback Machine, Spawners, retrieved August 1, 2007
  5. San Pablo Creek Watershed, Museum of California
  6. An assessment of stream flow and habitat quality for steelhead trout in San Pablo Creek, Contra Costa County Water Resources Collections and Archives, University of California Water Resources Center, May 1, 2004, retrieved August 1, 2007
  7. "A History of the Watershed". Spawners. 2007-07-30. Archived from A History of the Watershed the original Check |url= value (help) on 2007-07-30. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-10-09. Retrieved 2007-07-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) City of San Pablo News and Events
  9. SPAWNERS
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