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Volume I: Trail Maps, Research Methods & Historical Accounts
Coquille Indian Tribe Cultural Geography Project Coquelle Trails: Early Historical Roads and Trails of Ancestral Coquille Indian Lands, 1826 - 1875 Volume I: Trail Maps, Research Methods & Historical Accounts Report Prepared by: Bob Zybach, Program Manager Oregon Websites and Watersheds Project, Inc. & Don Ivy, Manager Coquille Indian Tribe Historic Preservation Office – Cultural Resources Program North Bend, Oregon January 4, 2013 Preface Coquelle Trails: Early Historical Roads and Trails of Ancestral Coquille Indian Lands, 1826 - 1875 renews a project originally started in 2006 to investigate and publish a “cultural geography” of the modern Coquille Indian Tribe: a description of the physical landscape and geographic area occupied or utilized by the Ancestors of the modern Coquille Tribe prior to -- and at the time of -- the earliest reported contacts with Europeans and Euro- Americans. Coquelle Trails is the first of what is expected to be several installments that will complete this renewed Cultural Geography Project. Although ships and sailors made contact with Indians in earlier years, the focus of this report begins with the first historical land-based contacts between Indians and foreigners along the rivers and beaches of Oregon’s south coast. Those few and brief encounters are documented in poorly written and often incomplete journals of men who, without maps or a true fix on their locations, wandered into and across the lands of Hanis, Miluk, and Athapaskan speaking Indians in what is today Coos and Curry Counties. Those wanderings were the first surges of the tidal wave of America’s Manifest Destiny that would soon wash over the Indians and their country. -
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Assessment Produced by The
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Assessment Produced by the Tenmile Lakes Basin Partnership Table of Contents Chapter 1 ........................................................................................................................1-1 Introduction................................................................................................................1-1 Chapter 2 ........................................................................................................................2-1 Fish & Fish Habitat ....................................................................................................2-1 Introduction ........................................................................................................2-1 Critical Questions ..............................................................................................2-2 Fish Presence......................................................................................................2-3 Species of Concern............................................................................................2-8 Life History ..........................................................................................................2-9 Hatcheries, Stocking Programs, Illicit Introductions..........................2-9 Conclusions........................................................................................................2-11 Channel Habitat Types............................................................................................2-12 Channel Modifications .............................................................................................2-20 -
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP)
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP) Prepared by: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality February 2007 Submissions by: Oregon Department of Forestry Oregon Department of Agriculture Oregon Department of Transportation Tenmile Lakes Basin Partnership TENMILE LAKES WATERSHED WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT PLAN FEBRUARY 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS ........................................................................................I FIGURES AND TABLES.................................................................................... IV ACRONYMS........................................................................................................ V CHAPTER 1 – BACKGROUND AND INTRODUCTION ......................................1 1.1 TMDL WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT PLAN GUIDANCE ..................................2 1.2 WQMP REQUIRED ELEMENTS - OAR 340-042-0040 (4)(I)(A-O) .....................3 CHAPTER 2 - CONDITION ASSESSMENT AND PROBLEM DESCRIPTION OAR 340-42-0040(4)(I)(A)....................................................................................5 2.1 WATER QUALITY IMPAIRMENT .........................................................................5 2.1.1 Aquatic Weeds (Macrophytes) ...................................................................................................... 5 2.1.2 Phytoplankton (floating algae) ...................................................................................................... 6 2.1.3 Chlorophyll a................................................................................................................................ -
Tenmile Lakes Nutrient Study Phase 2 Report
TENMILE LAKES NUTRIENT STUDY Phase II Report November, 2002 TENMILE LAKES NUTRIENT STUDY Phase II Report Submitted by Joseph Eilersa Kellie Vachéb and Jacob Kannc E&S Environmental Chemistry, Inc. Corvallis, OR to the Tenmile Lakes Basin Partnership Lakeside, OR November, 2002 Current Affiliations _______________________ a JC Headwaters, Inc., 1912 NE 3rd Street, PMB 341, Bend, OR 97701 b Oregon State University, Dept. of BioResources Engineering, Corvallis, OR 97331 c Aquatic Ecosystem Sciences, LLC, 232 Nutley Street, Ashland, OR 97520 Tenmile Lakes Nutrient Study - Phase II Report November, 2002 Page 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES.............................................................4 LIST OF FIGURES............................................................5 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .......................................................8 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY......................................................9 A. INTRODUCTION ........................................................12 B. STUDY AREA ...........................................................14 C. METHODS ..............................................................19 1. Sampling Design......................................................19 2. Site Selection ........................................................19 3. Field Instrumentation ..................................................21 4. Field Methods ........................................................21 5. Analytical Methods ....................................................23 6. Plankton ............................................................24 -
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Assessment
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Assessment Produced by the Tenmile Lakes Basin Partnership Table of Contents Chapter 1 ........................................................................................................................ 1-1 Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1-1 Chapter 2 ........................................................................................................................ 2-1 Fish & Fish Habitat .................................................................................................... 2-1 Introduction ........................................................................................................ 2-1 Critical Questions .............................................................................................. 2-1 Fish Presence ...................................................................................................... 2-3 Species of Concern............................................................................................ 2-8 Life History .......................................................................................................... 2-9 Hatcheries, Stocking Programs, Illicit Introductions .......................... 2-9 Conclusions ........................................................................................................ 2-11 Channel Habitat Types ............................................................................................ 2-12 Channel -
Tenmile Lake: Life and Limnology on the Oregon Coast
Coastal Lakes Tenmile Lake: Life and Limnology on the Oregon Coast Joe Eilers any of my lake projects have been pretty routine. You sign Mthe contract, conduct the work, deliver your report, and say goodbye to the client. Sometimes there would be follow-up work and, if fortunate, you make some friends along the way. But a few projects become very personal either because of the intense nature of the work, dangerous events, remarkable beauty of the site, or fascinating people that you encounter. For Tenmile Lake, it was all of the above. But, first a description of the lake and its origins. Tenmile Lake is officially two lakes, Tenmile Lake on the south and North Tenmile Lake to the north, both connected by a canal. However, the features of the lakes are so similar (Figure 1, Table 1), that for convenience, I’ll just to refer to them collectively as Tenmile Lake. Most Figure 1. A satellite image of Tenmile Lake (north and south) converging on the town of Lakeside. Oregon coastal lakes, such as Tenmile Clear Lake and Eel Lake are located to the north and both lakes discharge into Tenmile Creek, the (formerly called Johnson Lake), bear outlet from Tenmile Lake. The inset shows the watershed boundaries and dense stream network. relatively predictable names assigned by settlers, whereas others to the north of Tenmile still bear reminders of the Table 1. Tenmile Lake Morphometry. original inhabitants with mellifluous names such as Tahkenitch, Woahink, and North Tenmile Tenmile Combined Siltcoos. Lake Area (ac) 829 1130 1958 The Past Lake Perimeter (mi) 19.8 23.2 43 Depth (max- ft) 26.8 27 Tenmile Lake, as with most Oregon Depth (mean- ft) 14.8 16.3 coastal lakes, is a transient feature of the landscape. -
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL)
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) Prepared by: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality February 2007 Oregon Department of Environmental Quality Water Quality Division th 811 S.W. 6 Avenue Portland, OR 97204 This document can be accessed on the Internet at: http://www.deq.state.or.us/wq/TMDLs/southcoast.htm For more information contact: Pamela Blake, South Coast Basin Coordinator Department of Environmental Quality 381 N Second Coos Bay, Oregon 97420 [email protected] Eugene Foster, Manager of Watershed Management Section Department of Environmental Quality 811 Southwest 6th Avenue Portland, Oregon 97204 [email protected] John Blanchard, Western Region Watersheds Manager Department of Environmental Quality 221 Stewart Ave., Suite 201 Medford, Oregon 97501 [email protected] February 2007 Tenmile Lakes Watershed TMDL TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS.............................................................................................i LIST OF FIGURES...................................................................................................iv LIST OF TABLES .....................................................................................................v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ..........................................................................................vi STATEMENT OF PURPOSE..................................................................................vii ACRONYMS ..........................................................................................................viii -
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Total Maximum Daily Loads (Tmdls) & Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP)
Tenmile Lakes Watershed Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) & Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP) Response to Public Comments Prepared by: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality February 2007 Tenmile Lakes Watershed TMDL: Response to Comments February 2007 Introduction This Response to Public Comments document addresses comments received regarding the Draft Tenmile Watershed Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) and Water Quality Management Plan (WQMP) dated March, 2006. Grammatical, editorial, and formatting errors noted by reviewers are not addressed here but corrections have been made in the document where necessary. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (ODEQ) appreciates the time and effort that all the commenters put into reviewing the document. All comments have been considered by ODEQ and, where appropriate, have been addressed in the final document that has been submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). EPA will then either approve or disapprove the TMDL. Background The public comment period on the proposed TMDL and WQMP opened March 20, 2006. Written and oral comments were received during the public comment period that extended through May 18, 2006. An Informational meeting to present background on the technical and modeling components of the draft TMDLs was provided preceding both public hearing on May 3, 2006 at the Lakeside City Council Chamber. Two commenters provided ORAL comments at the public hearings in Lakeside. Remaining comments received by ODEQ were submitted in written (paper and electronic) form. Copies of the document were made available at various locations within the watershed including the Lakeside Public Library, the North Bend Public Library, the Coos Bay Public Library, the Coquille Public Library, the Lakeside City Council Chamber, and the Tenmile Lakes Basin Partnership offices, as well as at the Coos Bay and Portland ODEQ offices and on the internet. -
Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw
Tribal Integrated Water Quality Monitoring Program Surface Water & Fixed Station Quality Assurance Project Plan Version 4.0 Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua & Siuslaw Indians Natural Resources Department February 26, 2016 Integrated Water Quality Monitoring Program CTCLUSI Surface Water & Fixed Station QAPP 4.0 02/26/16 1 Tribal Acceptance and Approval Tribe: Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians Address: 1245 Fulton Avenue Coos Bay, Oregon 97420 Phone Number: (541) 888-9577 Fax Number: (541) 888-2853 Tribal Chairman: Mark Ingersoll Phone Number: (541) 290-4610 Approval Signature & Date: ,fy\Mlr~Mff Tribal Administrator: Phone Number: Approval Signature & Date: Director, Department of Natural Resources: Margaret Corvi Phone Number: Approval Signature & Date: .~"7z;.,,..1l_'-,i''/'-::rr..,..s.5=•·•=·=~~~~~·.····~o -s/17 II. EPA Acceptance and Approval Agency: EPA Region 10, Tribal Trust & Assistance Unit Oregon Operations Office Address: 805 SW Broadway Suite 500 Portland, OR 97205 Phone Number: (503) 326-3250 Fax Number: (503) 326-3399 EPA Project Officer: Phone Number: Approval Signature & Date: EPA Quality Assurance Manager: Donald Brown Phone Number: (206) 553-0717 Approval Signature and Date: Integrated Water Quality Monitoring Program CTCLUSI Surlace Water & Fixed Station QAPP 4.0 02126116 2 Distribution List Copies of the completed/signed QAPP are distributed to: Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians 1245 Fulton Avenue, Coos Bay, Oregon 97420 Alexis Barry (541) 888-9577 -
Stock Assessment and Optimal Escapement of Coho Salmon in Three Oregon Coastal Lakes
Information Report Stock Assessment and Optimal Escapement of Coho Salmon in Three Oregon Coastal Lakes Shijie Zhou Fish Division Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife 2501 SW First Avenue PO Box 59, Portland, Oregon 97207 December 2000 Contents Contents................................................................................................................................ i List of Tables.......................................................................................................................ii List of Figures ....................................................................................................................iii Acknowledgement............................................................................................................... v Abstract ............................................................................................................................... 1 Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 1 Methods............................................................................................................................... 2 Estimation of escapement ................................................................................................ 2 Estimation of recruitment ................................................................................................ 5 Freshwater harvest and terminal run............................................................................... -
Task 6. Tenmile Lake Boat Wash Effectiveness Monitoring
Portland State University PDXScholar Center for Lakes and Reservoirs Publications and Presentations Center for Lakes and Reservoirs 2014 OSMB Final Report: Task 6. Tenmile Lake Boat Wash Effectiveness Monitoring Samuel Cimino Portland State University Angela L. Strecker Portland State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/centerforlakes_pub Part of the Environmental Monitoring Commons, Fresh Water Studies Commons, and the Water Resource Management Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Citation Details Cimino, Samuel and Strecker, Angela L., "OSMB Final Report: Task 6. Tenmile Lake Boat Wash Effectiveness Monitoring" (2014). Center for Lakes and Reservoirs Publications and Presentations. 36. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/centerforlakes_pub/36 This Article is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Center for Lakes and Reservoirs Publications and Presentations by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. Task 6 – 1 OSMB Final Report: Task 6. Tenmile Lake Boat Wash Effectiveness Monitoring Final Report submitted by: Sam Cimino and Angela Strecker for Oregon State Marine Board funded by Aquatic Invasive Species grant to Portland State University Task 6 – 2 Table of Contents Abstract ....................................................................................................................................... 4 Introduction -
Geologic Trips Along Oregon
STATE OF OREGON DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND MINERAL INDUSTRIES 1069 STATE OFFICE BUILDING PORTLAND !. OREGON Bulletin No�O FIELD GUIDEBOOK COLLEGE TEACHERS CONFERENCE IN GEOLOGY Sponsored by National Science Foundation OREGON STATE COLLEGE CORVALLIS, OREGON June 15-27, 1959 Prepared under Direction of W. D. WILKINSON Professor of Geology Oregon State College 1959 STATE GOVERNING BOARD WILLIAM KENNEDY, CHAIRMAN . , PORTLAND . LES R CHILD . • GRANTS PASS HAROLD BANTA . , BAKER HOLLISI RE CM.T ODOLER D Price $1.50 FOREWORD This Centennial year, marking Oreg on's first 100 years of stateh ood, may well be considered to mark the first 100 years since Oreg on's pi oneer geol ogist and missi onary minister, Th omas Cond on, began to expl ore the ge ology in the State . It see rus fitting, therefore, to dedi cate to the mem ory of Thomas Cond on, this "Field Guidebook to Geologic Trips al ong Oreg on Highways, " whi ch was prepared for immediate use by the 1959 College Teachers Conference in Geol og y and for future use by the interested public. In the autumn of 1852, the young Reverend Condon and his wife, representing the Home Missi onary Board of the Congregati onal Church, sai led from New York around the Horn to San Francisc o, and fr om there continued their trip to Oreg on. Mr. Condon was forced to leave behind him his ge ology books and his collecti ons of rocks and fossils, which were his hobby . But on ce settled at his first church in St. Helens, Oregon, he soon began to ob serve the geologic formati on s about him, and noted in his first rep ort to the Home Missi on ary Board that the village was "built on a bl uff of porous volcanic rock." Alth ough his early years of pi oneer life in western Oregon left him little time for scien tific research, he tookti me to collect a few rocks and fossi Is.