http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake_River River

PerrineBridge spanningtheSnakeRiverCanyonat TwinFalls, Country UnitedStates

States , Idaho , ,

Tributaries SaltRiver , PortneufRiver , Owyhee left River , MalheurRiver , PowderRiver , GrandeRondeRiver HenrysFork , BoiseRiver , Salmon right River , ClearwaterRiver , PalouseRiver IdahoFalls , TwinFalls , Lewiston , Tri Cities Cities Source RockyMountains location YellowstoneNationalPark, Wyoming elevation 8,927ft (2,721m)[1] coordinates 44°7′49″N110°13′10″W[2] Mouth ColumbiaRiver location TriCities , Washington elevation 358ft (109m)[3] coordinates 46°11′10″N119°1′43″W[2] Length 1,040mi (1,674km )[4] Basin 108,000sqmi (280,000km² )[4] Discharge mouth average 56,900cuft /s(1,610m³ /s)[4] SnakeRiverwatershed The SnakeRiver is a major tributary of the in the U.S. states of Wyoming , Idaho , Oregon , and Washington . The river's length is 1,040 miles (1,670 km), its watershed drains 108,000 square miles (280,000 km 2), and the average discharge at its mouth is 56,900 cubic feet per second (1,610 m³/s). The river flows from its source in Yellowstone National Park through a series of mountain ranges, canyons, and plains. Geography

[edit ] Basin overview

SnakeRiver'sdrainagebasinincludesadiversityoflandscapes.Itsupperreachesliein the RockyMountains .IncentralIdahotheriverflowsthroughthebroad SnakeRiver Plain .AlongtheIdahoOregonbordertheriverflowsthrough HellsCanyon ,partofa largerphysiographicregioncalledthe ColumbiaRiverPlateau ,throughwhichtheSnake RiverflowsthroughWashingtontoitsconfluencewiththeColumbiaRiver.Partsofthe river'sbasinliewithinthe BasinandRange province,thoughitisitselfaphysiographic sectionofthe ColumbiaPlateau province,whichinturnispartofthelarger Intermontane Plateaus physiographicdivision.

TheSnakeisthelargesttributaryoftheColumbiaRiver,withameandischargeof 50,000cubicfeetpersecond(1,400m³/s),[5] or56,900cubicfeetpersecond(1,610m³/s) accordingtothe USGS ,the12thlargestintheUnitedStates.[4]

[edit ] Geology

TheLowerSnake10milesaboveitsconfluencewiththeColumbiaRiver.

FormuchofitscoursetheSnakeRiverflowsthroughthe SnakeRiverPlain ,a physiographicprovince extendingfromeasternOregonthroughwesternandcentral IdahointonorthwestWyoming.MuchoftheSnakeRiverPlainishighdesertandsemi desertatelevationsaveragingaround5,000feet(1,500m).Manyoftheriversinthis regionhavecutdeepandmeanderingcanyons.WestofTwinFalls,theplainismainly coveredwithstreamandlakesediments.DuringtheMiocene ,lavacreatedLake Idaho,whichcoveredalargeportionoftheSnakeRiverPlainbetweenTwinFallsand HellsCanyon.Thislargelakeexpandedandcontractedseveraltimesbeforefinally recedingintheearly Pleistocene .Inmorerecentgeologictime,about14,500yearsago, glacial LakeBonneville spilledcatastrophicallyintotheSnakeRiverPlain.Theflood carveddeepintothelandalongtheSnakeRiver,leavingdepositsofgravel,sand,and boulders,aswellasascablandtopographyinplaces.Resultsofthisfloodincludethe fallsandrapidsfromTwinFallsandShoshoneFallstoCraneFallsandSwanFalls,as wellasthemany"potholes"areas.[6]

TheSnakeRiverAquifer,oneofthemostproductive aquifers intheworld,underliesan areaofabout10,000squaremiles(26,000km 2)intheSnakeRiverPlain.Differencesin elevationandrockpermeabilityresultinmanydramatic springs ,someofwhichare artesian .The groundwater comesfromtheSnakeRiveritselfaswellasotherstreamsin theregion.SomestreamsonthenorthernsideoftheSnakeRiverPlain,suchasthe Lost River arecompletelyabsorbedintotheground,rechargingtheaquiferandemergingas springsthatflowintotheSnakeRiverinthewesternpartoftheplain.The hydraulic conductivity ofthebasaltrocksthatmakeuptheaquiferisveryhigh.Inplaceswater exitstheSnakeandLostriversintogroundconduitsatratesofnearly600cubicfeetper second(17m³/s).[7] Duetostreammodificationsandlargescaleirrigation,mostofthe waterthatusedtorechargetheaquiferdirectlynowdoessointheformofirrigation waterdrainage.[8]

[edit ] Upper course

TheSnakeoriginatesnearthe ContinentalDivide in YellowstoneNationalPark in northwest Wyoming andflowssouthinto JacksonLake in GrandTetonNationalPark , thensouththrough JacksonHole andpastthetownof Jackson .Theriverthenflowswest throughWyoming's SnakeRiverCanyon andexitsWyomingat AlpineJunction ,whereit enters Idaho atthe PalisadesReservoir .

BelowthePalisadesReservoir,theSnakeRiverflowsnorthwestthrough SwanValley to itsconfluencewith HenrysFork near Rigby .Theregionaroundtheconfluenceisalarge inlanddelta .Abovethejuncture,theSnakeRiverislocallycalledtheSouthForkofthe SnakeRiver,sinceHenrysForkissometimescalledtheNorthForkoftheSnakeRiver.

TheSnakeRiverthenswingssouthandwestinanarcacrosssoutherncentralIdaho, followingtheSnakeRiverPlain.Itpassesthroughthecityof IdahoFalls andby Blackfoot inaregionofirrigatedagriculture.Northofthe FortHallIndianReservation theriverisimpoundedbythe AmericanFalls .Thedamandreservoirarepartofthe MinidokaIrrigationProjectmanagedbythe UnitedStatesBureauofReclamation .The PortneufRiver joinstheSnakeatthereservoir.Downriverfromthedamis Massacre RocksStatePark ,asiteonthepathoftheold OregonTrail .

Afterreceivingthewatersof RaftRiver ,theSnakeRiverentersanotherreservoir, Lake Walcott ,impoundedby MinidokaDam ,runbytheBureauofReclamationmainlyfor irrigationpurposes.Anotherdam, MilnerDamanditsreservoir,MilnerReservoir,liejust downriverfromMinidokaDam.Belowthatisthecityof TwinFalls ,afterwhichtheriver flowsintoIdaho's SnakeRiverCanyon (thesiteof EvelKnievel 'sstunt)over Shoshone Falls andunderthe PerrineBridge .

[edit ] Lower course

AfterexitingtheSnakeRiverCanyon,theSnakereceivesthewatersofmoretributaries, the BruneauRiver andthe MaladRiver .Afterpassingthe SnakeRiverBirdsofPrey NationalConservationArea ,theSnakeflowstoward Boise andtheIdahoOregonborder. Afterreceivingnumeroustributariessuchasthe BoiseRiver , OwyheeRiver , Malheur River , PayetteRiver , WeiserRiver ,and PowderRiver ,theSnakeenters HellsCanyon .

RaftingtheWildandScenicSnakeinHellsCanyonWilderness.

InHellsCanyontheSnakeRiverisimpoundedbythreedams, BrownleeDam , Oxbow Dam ,and HellsCanyonDam (whichcompletelyblocksthemigrationof anadromous fish[9] ),afterwhichtheriverisdesignateda NationalWildandScenicRiver asisflows through HellsCanyonWilderness .Inthissectionoftheriver,the SalmonRiver ,oneof thelargesttributariesoftheSnake,joins.JustacrosstheWashingtonstateline,another largetributary,the GrandeRondeRiver joinstheSnake.

AstheSnakeflowsnorthoutofHellsCanyon,itpassedthecitiesof Lewiston,Idaho and Clarkston,Washington ,whereitreceivesthe ClearwaterRiver .FromtheretheSnake Riverswingsnorth,thensouth,throughsoutheastWashington's Palouse region,before joiningthe ColumbiaRiver neartheTriCities.Inthisfinalriverreachtherearefour largedams, LowerGraniteLockandDam , LittleGooseLockandDam , Lower MonumentalLockandDam ,and IceHarborLockandDam .Thesedams,builtbythe UnitedStatesArmyCorpsofEngineers serveashydroelectricpowersourcesaswellas ensuringbargetrafficnavigationtoLewiston,Idaho. [edit ] History

[edit ] Name

Thename"Snake"possiblyderivedfromanSshaped(snake)signwhichtheShoshone Indiansmadewiththeirhandstomimicswimmingsalmon. Variantnamesoftheriverhaveincluded:GreatSnakeRiver,LewisFork,LewisRiver, MadRiver,SaptinRiver,ShoshoneRiver,andYampahpa.

[edit ] Early inhabitants

The Tetons - Snake River (1942)byAnselAdams

PeoplehavebeenlivingalongtheSnakeRiverforatleast11,000years.DanielS.Meatte dividestheprehistoryofthewesternSnakeRiverBasinintothreemainphasesor "adaptivesystems".Thefirsthecalls"BroadSpectrumForaging",datingfrom11,500to 4,200yearsbeforepresent.Duringthisperiodpeopledrewuponawidevarietyoffood resources.Thesecondperiod,"SemisedentaryForaging",datesfrom4,200250years beforepresentandisdistinctiveforanincreasedrelianceuponfish,especiallysalmon,as wellasfoodpreservationandstorage.Thethirdphase,from250to100yearsbefore present,hecalls"EquestrianForagers".Itischaracterizedbylargehorsemountedtribes thatspentlongamountsoftimeawayfromtheirlocalforagingrangehuntingbison.[10] In theeasternSnakeRiverPlainthereissomeevidenceof Clovis , Folsom ,and Plano cultures datingbackover10,000yearsago.Bytheprotohistoricandhistoricera,the easternSnakeRiverPlainwasdominatedby Shoshone andother"Plateau"culture tribes.[11]

Earlyfurtradersandexplorersnotedregionaltradingcenters,andarchaeological evidencehasshownsometobeofconsiderableantiquity.Onesuchtradingcenterinthe Weiser areaexistedasearlyas4,500yearsago.The Fremontculture mayhave contributedtothehistoricShoshones ,butitisnotwellunderstood.Anotherpoorly understoodearlyculturalhearthiscalledtheMidvaleComplex.Theintroductionofthe horsetotheSnakeRiverPlainaround1700helpedinestablishingtheShoshoneand Northern Paiute cultures.[12]

OntheSnakeRiverinsoutheasternWashingtonthereareseveralancientsites.Oneofthe oldestandmostwellknowniscalledtheMarmesRockshelter,whichwasusedfromover 11,000yearsagotorelativelyrecenttimes.The MarmesRockshelter wasfloodedin1968 by LakeHerbertG.West ,theLowerMonumentalDam'sreservoir.[13]

OtherculturesoftheSnakeRiver'sbasin'sprotohistoricandhistoricperiodsincludethe NezPerce , Cayuse , WallaWalla , Palus , Bannock ,andmanyothers.

[edit ] Exploration

The LewisandClarkExpedition of18041806wasthefirstmajorU.S.explorationofthe lowerportionoftheSnakeRiver,andtheSnakewasonceknownastheLewisRiver. LaterAmericanexploratoryexpeditions,whichexploredmuchofthelengthoftheSnake River,includedthe AstorExpedition of18101812, JohnC.Frémont in1832,and BenjaminBonneville in18331834.TheBritish NorthWestCompany and,after1821, Hudson'sBayCompany sentlargetrappingandtradingexpeditionstotheupperSnake Riveranditstributaries.Theseannualexpeditionsbeganin1817andcontinuedforabout 30years.Theyrangedwidelythroughouttoday'ssouthernIdaho,westernWyoming,and northernUtah,intheprocessexploringtheregion.Manyoftheriversandmountains haveFrenchnames,reflectingtheemploymentofFrenchCanadian voyageur bythe Britishcompanies.ThepolicyoftheHudson'sBayCompany'swastodepletetheregion offurbearinganimalsasquicklyaspossible,soastomakeitimpossibleforAmerican traderstooperatethere.Thisgoalwaslargelysuccessful.Americantraderscouldnot competeintheSnakeRivercountry.Incontrast,theHudson'sBayCompanyfoundthe SnakeRiverexpeditionsveryprofitable.[14]

Bythemiddle19thcentury,the OregonTrail hadbeenestablished,generallyfollowing muchoftheSnakeRiver.

River modifications

[edit ] Dams

LowerGraniteDam Many dams havebeenbuiltontheSnakeRiveranditstributaries,mainlyforpurposesof providing irrigation waterand hydroelectric powerandranginginsizefromsmall diversiondams tomajorhighdams.

LargedamsincludefouronthelowerSnake,inWashington,builtandoperatedbythe U.S.ArmyCorpsofEngineers : IceHarbor , LowerMonumental , LittleGoose ,and Lower Granite .Thesedamswerebuiltfrom1962to1975forhydroelectricpowerand navigation.Theyareequippedwithlocks,makingtheriverasfarasLewistonan extensionoftheColumbiaRiver'sbargenavigationsystem.[15] Thefourdamswere modifiedinthe1980stobetteraccommodatefishpassage.[16]

Upriver,intheHellsCanyonregion,therearethreelargehydroelectricdams,operatedby IdahoPower ,aprivateutilitycompany.CollectivelynamedtheHellsCanyonProject,the threedamsare,inupriverorder: HellsCanyonDam , OxbowDam ,and BrownleeDam . Nothavingfishladders,theyarethefirsttotalbarriertoupriverfishmigration.

InsouthwesternIdahothereareseverallargedams. SwanFallsDam ,builtin1901,was thefirsthydroelectricdamontheSnakeaswellasthefirsttotalbarriertoupriverfish migration.Itwasrebuiltinthe1990sbyIdahoPower.UpriverfromSwanFallsis anotherhydroelectricdamoperatedbyIdahoPower,the C.J.StrikeDam ,builtin1952. Thisdamalsoservesirrigationpurposes.Continuingupriver,IdahoPoweroperatesaset ofthreehydroelectricdamprojectscollectivelycalledtheMidSnakeProjects,allbuiltin the1940sand1950s.Theyare: BlissDam , LowerSalmonFallsDam ,andthetwodams oftheUpperSalmonFallsProject, UpperSalmonFallsDamA and UpperSalmonFalls DamB .

NearthecityofTwinFallstwowaterfallshavebeenmodifiedforhydropower,Shoshone FallsandTwinFalls.CollectivelycalledtheShoshoneFallsProject,theyareoldand relativelysmalldams,currentlyoperatedbyIdahoPower.AboveTwinFallsis Milner Dam ,builtin1905forirrigationandrebuiltin1992withhydroelectricproductionadded. ThedamandirrigationworksareownedbyMilnerDam,Inc,whilethepowerplantis ownedbyIdahoPower.

AboveMilnerDam,mostofthelargedamsareprojectsofthe U.S.Bureauof Reclamation ,builtmainlyforirrigation,somearehydroelectricaswell.Allpartofthe Bureau'sMinidokaProject,thedamsare: MinidokaDam(built1909), AmericanFalls Dam (1927), PalisadesDam (1957),and JacksonLakeDam on JacksonLake (1911). Thesedams,alongwithtwoothersandnumerousirrigationcanals,supplywatertoabout 1.1millionacres(4,500km²)insouthernIdaho.[17]

Thecityof IdahoFalls operatestheremaininglargedamontheSnakeRiver, GemState Dam ,alongwithseveralsmallerassociateddams,forhydroelectricandirrigation purposes. TherearemanyotherdamsonthetributariesoftheSnakeRiver,builtmainlyfor irrigation.TheyaremainlyoperatedbytheBureauofReclamationorlocalgovernment andprivateowners.

WhilethemanydamsintheSnakeRiverbasinhavetransformedtheregion'seconomy, theyhavealsohadanadverse environmental effectonwildlife,mostnotablyonwild salmon migrations.Sincethe1990s,someconservationorganizationsandfishermenare seekingtorestorethelowerSnakeRiverandSnakeRiversalmonandsteelheadby removingfourfederallyowneddamsonthelowerSnakeRiver.[18][19]

Lookingtowardthe Idaho sidefromthe Oregon sidewiththe OxbowDam inthebackground.

[edit ] Navigation

Inthe1960sand1970stheU.S.ArmyCorpsofEngineersbuiltfourdamsandlockson thelowerSnakeRivertofacilitateshipping.ThelowerColumbiaRiverhaslikewisebeen dammedfornavigation.Thusadeep shippingchannel throughlocksandslackwater reservoirsforheavy barges existsfromthePacificOceantoLewiston,Idaho.Mostbarge trafficoriginatingontheSnakeRivergoestodeepwaterportsonthelowerColumbia River,suchas Portland . Grain ,mostly wheat ,isthemainproductshippedfromthe Snake,andnearlyallofitisexportedinternationallyfromthelowerColumbiaRiver ports.

Theshippingchannelisauthorizedtobeatleast14feet(4.3m)deepand250feet(76m) wide.Whereriverdepthswerelessthan14feet(4m),theshippingchannelhasbeen dredged inmostplaces.Dredgingandredredgingworkisongoingandactualdepthsvary overtime.[20]

Withachannelabout5feet(1.5m)deeperthanthe MississippiRiverSystem ,the ColumbiaandSnakeriverscanfloatbargestwiceasheavy.[21] AgriculturalproductsfromIdahoandeasternWashingtonareamongthemaingoods transportedbybargeontheSnakeandColumbiarivers.Grain,mainlywheat,accounts formorethan85%ofthecargobargedonthelowerSnakeRiver.In1998,over 123,000,000USbushels(4.3×10 9l/9.8E+8USdrygal/950,000,000impgal)ofgrain werebargedontheSnake.BeforethecompletionofthelowerSnakedams,grainfrom theregionwastransportedbytruckorrailtoColumbiaRiverportsaroundtheTriCities. OtherproductsbargedonthelowerSnakeRiverincludepeas,lentils,forestproducts,and petroleum.[20]

AmongthenegativeconsequencesofthelowerSnakeRiver'snavigationalslackwater reservoirsarethefloodingofhistoricandarchaeologicalsites,thestillingofoncefamous rapids,theslowingofcurrentsandanassociatedrisingofwatertemperature,anda generaldeclineintheabilityofwildfishtomigrateupanddowntheriver.

ShoshoneFalls near TwinFalls,Idaho

ColumbiaRiverBasin [edit ] See also

• SnakeRiverPlain(ecoregion) • LostRiver(Idaho) • AnglinginYellowstoneNationalPark • ListofcrossingsoftheSnakeRiver • SnakeRiverPlain • ListofIdahorivers • ListofOregonrivers • ListofWashingtonrivers • ListofWyomingrivers • ListofNationalWildandScenicRivers [edit ] References

1. ^GoogleEarth elevationfor GNIS sourcecoordinates.RetrievedonApril29,2007 2. ^ abUSGSGNIS:SnakeRiver ,USGSGNIS 3. ^GoogleEarth elevationfor GNIS mouthcoordinates.RetrievedonApril29,2007 4. ^ abcdKammerer,J.C.(May1990)." LargestRiversintheUnitedStates ".U.S. GeologicalSurvey.Retrievedon 2008 0126 . 5. ^http://www.idahohistory.net/Reference%20Series/0294.pdf 6. ^SnakeRiverPlaingeologyfromOrr,ElizabethL.;WilliamN.Orr(1996)."Snake RiverPlainandOwyheeUplands", Geology of the . McGrawHill . ISBN0070480184. 7. ^SnakeRiverPlainaquiferinformationfromOrr,ElizabethL.;WilliamN.Orr(1996). Geology of the Pacific Northwest . McGrawHill ,248249. ISBN0070480184. 8. ^UpperSnakeRiverBasinNAWQAFactSheet ,USGSWaterResourcesofIdaho 9. ^SnakeRiver 10. ^SummaryofWesternSnakeRiverPrehistory ,DigitalAtlasofIdaho 11. ^SoutheasternSnakeRiverBasinPrehistory ,DigitalAtlasofIdaho 12. ^WesternSnakeRiverPrehistory ,DigitalAtlasofIdaho 13. ^MarmesRockshelter ,HistoryLink 14. ^Mackie,RichardSomerset(1997). Trading Beyond the Mountains: The British Fur Trade on the Pacific 1793-1843 .Vancouver:UniversityofBritishColumbia(UBC) Press,pp.21,64. ISBN0774806133. 15. ^ErikRobinson(April15,2007)." PressurebuildsonSnakeRiverdams ", The Columbian . 16. ^20YearsofProgress:Hydropower 17. ^MinidokaProject ,USBR 18. ^Robinson,Erik(October7,2006)." BreachSnakeRiverdams,saysexSecretary Babbitt ", The Columbian . 19. ^LyndaV.Mapes(March5,2006)." ChangingcurrentsIntheendlessfrayoverfish, dreamsanddecisionsdrift ", The Seattle Times . 20. ^ abLowerSnakeRiverTransportationStudyFinalReport,AmericanRivers 21. ^Harden,Blaine(1996) A River Lost: The Life and Death of the Columbia ,W.W. Norton&Company. ISBN0393316904 [edit ] External links