PhotosLocation


Big_Canyon_Creek_(Lake_County) Latitude and Longitude:

38°48′22″N 122°36′54″W / 38.806144°N 122.615064°W / 38.806144; -122.615064
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Big Canyon Creek
Big Canyon Creek (Lake County) is located in California
Big Canyon Creek (Lake County)
Big Canyon Creek (Lake County) is located in the United States
Big Canyon Creek (Lake County)
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • coordinates 38°51′29″N 122°43′52″W / 38.8579579°N 122.7311008°W / 38.8579579; -122.7311008
Mouth Putah Creek
 • coordinates
38°48′22″N 122°36′54″W / 38.806144°N 122.615064°W / 38.806144; -122.615064
 • elevation
1,040 feet (320 m)
Length8 miles (13 km)

Big Canyon Creek is a creek in Lake County, California. It is a tributary of Putah Creek.

Hydrology

Big Canyon Creek is an 8 miles (13 km) long tributary of Putah Creek. Its mouth is at an elevation of 1,040 feet (320 m). [1] Big Canyon Creek supplies rainfall to the Putah Creek drainage with very little snowmelt or base flow. It does not contain any reservoirs to provide surface storage and regulate flows. [2] In 1912 Warden R. L. Sinkey wrote of Putah Creek, "Becomes dry anywhere below Winters during the summer months. Putah Creek is just a small stream in the summertime. St. Helena Creek, Anderson Creek, Dry Creek run just small streams. Big Canyon Creek runs more water, I think, than all the rest". [3]

Location

The Köppen climate classification is Csb : Warm-summer Mediterranean climate. [4]

Boggs Mountain is an elongated rolling highland. [5] It forms a topographical divide separating Big Canyon Creek to the east from Kelsey Creek to the west. [6] Adams Springs is beside the creek, near its head. [7] William Robert Prather, who developed Adams Springs, corresponded with Thomas Edison in the late 1890s, who told him how to build a Pelton wheel in Big Canyon Creek to generate electricity for the resort. [8]

Big Canyon Road (107) runs along the lower part of the creek. There is a 24.6 feet (7.5 m) steel bridge that carries the road across the creek below the point where it is joined by Bad Creek. It was built in 1930 and reconstructed in 1993. As of November 2017 it was in poor condition and its structure had been appraised as "basically intolerable requiring high priority of replacement". [9]

Tributaries

Stream GNIS id Parent Mouth Length
Coords Elev ft Elev m mi km
Big Canyon Creek 219152 Putah Creek 38°48′22″N 122°36′52″W / 38.80611°N 122.61444°W / 38.80611; -122.61444 1,040 320 8 13
←Mill Creek (Big Canyon Creek) 228668 Big Canyon Creek 38°51′02″N 122°42′02″W / 38.85056°N 122.70056°W / 38.85056; -122.70056 2,119 646 1.5 2.4
←Spikenard Creek 235198 Big Canyon Creek 38°50′59″N 122°40′31″W / 38.84972°N 122.67528°W / 38.84972; -122.67528 1,640 500 2 3.2
←Bad Creek 218510 Big Canyon Creek 38°50′55″N 122°40′00″W / 38.84861°N 122.66667°W / 38.84861; -122.66667 1,568 478 1 1.6
←Malo Creek 227987 Big Canyon Creek 38°49′54″N 122°38′41″W / 38.83167°N 122.64472°W / 38.83167; -122.64472 1,270 390 2 3.2

See also

Notes

Sources

  • "Adams, California", Geographic Names Information System, United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior, 19 January 1981, retrieved 3 May 2021
  • Baughn, James (November 2017), "Big Canyon Road over Big Canyon Creek", Bridgereports.com, retrieved 2021-05-04
  • "Big Canyon Creek, Lake County, California, United States", Mindat, retrieved 2021-05-04
  • "Big Canyon Creek", Geographic Names Information System, United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior, 19 January 1981, retrieved 2021-05-04
  • Draft Environmental Impact Report for Geothermal Exploration Permit, Boggs Mountain State Forest, Lake County, Ca, The Commission, 1976
  • Lake County Planning Department (May 1989), Cobb Mountain Area Plan (PDF) (Preliminary Draft), retrieved 2021-04-29
  • Lake County Water Inventory and Analysis (PDF), CDM, March 2006, retrieved 2021-05-04
  • Shapovalov, Leo (April 1947), "Report on Fisheries Resources in Connection With the Proposed Yolo-Solano Development of the United States Bureau of Reclamation" (PDF), California Fish and Game, 38 (2), San Francisco: State of California, Department of Natural Resources, retrieved 2021-05-04
  • Wakefield, David (2 October 2020), "The Springs That Made Lake County Famous: Adams Springs", The Lake County Bloom, retrieved 2021-05-01