Elwha River
{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}
{{Infobox river
| name = Elwha River
| name_native =
| name_native_lang =
| name_other =
| name_etymology =
| image = Elwha River U.S. Route 101 Mt Fairchild.jpg
| image_caption = U.S. Route 101 crossing the Elwha River with Mt Fairchild in the Background.
| map = Elwha river dams.gif
| map_size = 300
| map_caption = Map of the Elwha River
| pushpin_map = USA Washington
| pushpin_map_size = 300
| pushpin_map_caption= Mouth of the Elwha River in Washington
| subdivision_type1 = Country
| subdivision_name1 = United States
| subdivision_type2 = State
| subdivision_name2 = Washington
| subdivision_type3 = Counties
| subdivision_name3 = Clallam, Jefferson
| subdivision_type4 =
| subdivision_name4 =
| subdivision_type5 = City
| subdivision_name5 = Port Angeles
| length = {{convert|45|mi|km|abbr=on}}
| width_min =
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| depth_min =
| depth_avg =
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| discharge1_location= McDonald Bridge, River mile 8.6
| discharge1_min = {{convert|10|cuft/s|m3/s|abbr=on}}
| discharge1_avg = {{convert|1507|cuft/s|m3/s|abbr=on}}
| discharge1_max = {{convert|41600|cuft/s|m3/s|abbr=on}}
| source1 = Olympic Range
| source1_location =
| source1_coordinates= {{coord|47|46|8|N|123|34|43|W|display=inline}}{{cite gnis|id=1531449|name=Elwha River|entrydate=September 10, 1979|access-date=January 3, 2013}}
| source1_elevation = {{convert|3655|ft|abbr=on}}Google Earth elevation for GNIS coordinates.
| mouth = Strait of Juan de Fuca
| mouth_location =
| mouth_coordinates = {{coord|48|9|2|N|123|33|35|W|display=inline,title}}
| mouth_elevation = {{convert|0|ft|abbr=on}}
| progression =
| river_system =
| basin_size = {{convert|318|sqmi|abbr=on}}[http://pubs.usgs.gov/wdr/2005/wdr-wa-05-1/pdf/wa00103ADR2005_Figure14.pdf Hoko, Elwha, and Dungeness River Basins], Water Resource Data, Washington, 2005, USGS.
| tributaries_left = Cat Creek, Goldie River, Indian Creek
| tributaries_right = Hayes River, Lost River, Lillian River, Little River
| custom_label =
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}}
The Elwha River is a {{convert|45|mi|km|adj=on}} river on the Olympic Peninsula in the U.S. state of Washington. From its source at Elwha snowfinger in the Olympic Mountains, it flows generally north to the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Most of the river's course is within the Olympic National Park.
The Elwha is one of several rivers in the Pacific Northwest that hosts all five species of native Pacific salmon (chinook, coho, chum, sockeye, and pink salmon), plus four anadromous trout species (steelhead, coastal cutthroat trout, bull trout, and Dolly Varden char). From 1911 to 2014, dams blocked fish passage on the lower Elwha River. Before the dams, 400,000 adult salmon returned yearly to spawn in {{convert|70|mi|km}} of river habitat. Prior to dam removal, fewer than 4,000 salmon returned each year in only {{convert|4.9|mi|km}} of habitat below the lower dam. The National Park Service removed the two dams as part of the $325 million Elwha Ecosystem Restoration Project. Dam removal work began in September 2011 and was completed in August 2014. The river has already carried sediment to its mouth, creating 70 acres of estuary habitat at the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
The first documented use of the name Elwha River dates to Henry Kellett's 1846 map.{{cite book |last= Parratt |first= Smitty |title= Gods & goblins: A Field Guide to Place Names of Olympic National Park |year= 1984 |publisher= CP Publications |isbn= 978-0-914195-00-9 |page= 43}}
Course
File:Elwha River 2022 by Madison Falls.webm
The Elwha River begins at the Elwha snowfinger near Mount Barnes and Mount Queets in the Olympic Range within Olympic National Park, in Jefferson County, Washington. The river flows southeast, then curves northward for the great majority of its course, with its mouth at the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Major peaks near the Elwha's source include Mount Queets, Mount Christie, Mount Meany, Mount Noyes, and Mount Seattle.
After receiving the tributaries Delabarre and Godkin creeks, the Elwha River flows northward. The Hayes River joins in Press Valley, where the Hayes River Ranger Station is located. Lost River joins near the northern end of Press Valley, after which the Elwha crosses into Clallam County, Washington.
Just after the county line, the Elwha River passes the Elkhorn Ranger Station and enters the Grand Canyon of the Elwha. As the river leaves the Grand Canyon, it is crossed by Dodger Point Bridge. Humes Ranch Cabin is located near the river along the Geyser Valley trail. After passing Krause Bottom, the river enters Rica Canyon at Goblins Gate. Prior to dam removal, the river fanned out into a delta below Rica Canyon, at the head of Lake Mills, the reservoir behind Glines Canyon Dam. Below the dam site, the Elwha is paralleled by Olympic Hot Springs Road. The river receives a tribunate from the Madison creek. The trailhead for Madison Creek Falls is also along the river. Campgrounds and the Elwha Ranger Station are located along the river before it exits Olympic National Park. Until early 2012, when Lake Aldwell was drained, the river entered this reservoir behind Elwha Dam.
Downriver from the former site of the Elwha Dam, the Elwha River flows several miles north through the Elwha Canyon and the Lower Elwha Indian Reservation, to enter the Strait of Juan de Fuca at Angeles Point, just west of the city of Port Angeles, Washington.Course info mainly from {{cite book | title = Washington Road & Recreation Atlas | year = 2000 | publisher = Benchmark Maps}}
Dams
{{main|Restoration of the Elwha River}}
The undamming of the Elwha was, at the time, the largest dam removal project in history.{{cite news|url=http://www.seattlepi.com/default/article/Dams-power-down-in-the-largest-US-dam-removal-1399989.php |title=Dams power down in the largest US dam removal |last=Le |first=Phuong |newspaper=The Seattle Times |date=May 28, 2011 |access-date=January 3, 2013 }}{{dead link|date=December 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}{{Cite journal|last=|date=December 10, 2018|title=River bounces back after world's largest-ever dam removal|url=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-07707-0|journal=Nature|volume=564|issue=7736}} The Elwha Ecosystem Restoration project is the second largest ecosystem restoration project the National Park Service has attempted, after the Everglades. The Elwha River Ecosystem and Fisheries Restoration Act of 1992 was signed by the first President Bush after it was passed by Congress. The project was projected to cost $350 million.{{cite news|title=Removing barriers to salmon migration|last=Yardley|first=William|date=July 29, 2011|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/30/us/30dam.html|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=January 3, 2013}} The act authorized the Secretary of the Interior to acquire and remove the two dams on the river and restore the ecosystem and native anadromous fisheries.
The removal of the {{convert|108|ft|m|adj=on}} tall Elwha Dam and the {{convert|210|ft|m|adj=on}} tall Glines Canyon Dam began in September 2011. Two downstream water treatment facilities were completed in early 2010 to protect the water supply for the city of Port Angeles and the fish hatcheries from silt and sediment that would wash downstream once the dams were removed. In order to protect fish stocks below the dams during removal, the dams were taken out over a three-year period, pausing to ensure there would be no silt in the river while salmon spawned downstream.
The Elwha Dam was completely dismantled in March 2012. Restoration of the area around the dam followed, including tens of thousands of native plants started in local greenhouses. The removal of the Glines Canyon Dam was completed in August 2014.
Salmon will naturally recolonize the {{convert|70|mi|km}} of habitat in Olympic National Park. The area once under the reservoirs is being revegetated to prevent erosion and speed up ecological restoration of the area. Because almost all of the Elwha's watershed is in a national park, the river should become relatively pristine, with few of the issues of agricultural runoff and water heating that affect other salmon river habitat in the Pacific Northwest. Model projections by the Park Service show that up to 392,000 fish will fill 70 miles of habitat, theoretically matching the "pre-dam peak".
By late December 2012, about 10 percent of the estimated {{convert|25000000|yd3|m3}} of sediment that had been caught behind the river's two dams had collected at the Elwha's mouth, forming sandbars. With the Elwha Dam removed, the sediment had been pushed downstream as heavy rainfall produced faster-moving flows in the free-running river.{{cite news|title=Sediment forming sandbars at Elwha River mouth|last=Schwartz|first=Jeremy|url=http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20121226/NEWS/312269996/sediment-forming-sandbars-at-elwha-river-mouth|newspaper=Peninsula Daily News|location=Port Angeles, Washington|date=December 25, 2012|access-date=January 3, 2013}} By November 2014, 30 percent of the stored sediment had been carried to the mouth of the river, creating {{convert|70|acre|hectare}} of new estuary habitat for a wide variety of shellfish and other species.
See also
References
Further reading
- Watershed: The Undamming of America by Elizabeth Grossman (2002, {{ISBN|1-58243-108-6}})
- {{citation |last=Mapes |first=Lynda V. |title=Elwha: Roaring back to life | newspaper=The Seattle Times |date=February 13, 2016 |url=http://projects.seattletimes.com/2016/elwha/}}
External links
{{Commons category|Elwha River}}
- [http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/news/160602-us-elwha-river-dam-removal-restoration-vin?sf28261281=1 National Geographic Video on Elwha Dam Removal Impact on Nearshore Environment]{{dead link|date=January 2025|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20160305212010/http://hydromojo.com/streamcast?location=elwha-river-8-sw-elwha-river-at-mcdonald-bridge Elwha River Forecasts]
- [https://home.nps.gov/olym/learn/nature/elwha-ecosystem-restoration.htm Elwha River Restoration]
- [http://www.elwha.org/ The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe]
- [http://interactive-earth.com/resources/science-visualizations/7-glines-canyon-dam-removal-process.html Glines Canyon Dam Removal Animation]
- [http://interactive-earth.com/resources/science-visualizations/8-elwha-dam-removal-process.html Elwha Dam Removal Animation]
- [http://www.bioone.org/toc/nwsc/82/sp1 Northwest Science Special Issue] containing peer reviewed Elwha River research
- [http://kcts9.org/undamming-elwha "Undamming the Elwha"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121213091457/http://kcts9.org/undamming-elwha |date=2012-12-13 }} documentary produced by KCTS-TV
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Category:Rivers of Washington (state)