Clark Fork River

Clark Fork
Original name given by
Lewis and Clark expedition:
Clark's River
River
The Clark Fork at Missoula, Montana
Country United States
States Montana, Idaho
Tributaries
 - left Bitterroot River
 - right Blackfoot River, Flathead River, Bull River
Cities Butte, Missoula
Source Silver Bow Creek
 - location Butte, Silver Bow County, Montana
 - elevation 6,882 ft (2,098 m) [1]
 - coordinates 46°4′32″N 112°27′56″W / 46.07556°N 112.46556°W / 46.07556; -112.46556 [2]
Secondary source Warm Springs Creek (Montana)
 - location Flint Creek Range, Granite County, Montana
 - elevation 7,466 ft (2,276 m) [3]
 - coordinates 46°15′39″N 113°8′12″W / 46.26083°N 113.13667°W / 46.26083; -113.13667 [4]
Source confluence
 - location Deer Lodge County, Montana
 - elevation 4,795 ft (1,462 m) [5]
 - coordinates 46°11′12″N 112°46′18″W / 46.18667°N 112.77167°W / 46.18667; -112.77167 [6]
Mouth Lake Pend Oreille
 - location Bonner County, Idaho
 - elevation 2,064 ft (629 m) [7]
 - coordinates 48°11′0″N 116°16′9″W / 48.18333°N 116.26917°W / 48.18333; -116.26917Coordinates: 48°11′0″N 116°16′9″W / 48.18333°N 116.26917°W / 48.18333; -116.26917 [6]
Length 310 mi (499 km) [6]
Basin 22,905 sq mi (59,324 km2) [8]
Discharge for Whitehorse Rapids near Cabinet, ID
 - average 21,930 cu ft/s (621 m3/s) [9]
 - max 195,000 cu ft/s (5,522 m3/s)
 - min 762 cu ft/s (22 m3/s)
Map of the Clark Fork, its main tributaries and downriver connection to the Columbia River via the Pend Oreille River.

The Clark Fork, or The Clark Fork of the Columbia River, is a river in the U.S. states of Montana and Idaho, approximately 310 miles (500 km) long. The largest river by volume in Montana,[10] it drains an extensive region of the Rocky Mountains in western Montana and northern Idaho in the watershed of the Columbia River. The river flows northwest through a long valley at the base of the Cabinet Mountains and empties into Lake Pend Oreille in the Idaho Panhandle. The Pend Oreille River in Idaho, Washington, and British Columbia, Canada which drains the lake to the Columbia in Washington, is sometimes included as part of the Clark Fork, giving it a total length of 479 miles (771 km), with a drainage area of 25,820 square miles (66,900 km2). In its upper 20 miles (32 km) in Montana near Butte, it is known as Silver Bow Creek. Interstate 90 follows much of the upper course of the river from Butte to northwest of Missoula. The highest point within the river's watershed is Mount Evans at 10,641 feet (3,243 m) in Deer Lodge County, Montana along the Continental Divide.[11]

The Clark Fork is a Class I river for recreational purposes in Montana from Warm Springs Creek to the Idaho border.[12]

The Clark Fork should not be confused with the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River, which is located in Montana and Wyoming.

Description

Clark Fork flowing through downtown Missoula (2003)

It rises as Silver Bow Creek[2] in southwestern Montana, less than 5 miles (8.0 km) from the Continental Divide near downtown Butte, from the confluence of Basin and Blacktail creeks. It flows northwest and north through a valley in the mountains, passing east of Anaconda, where it changes its name to the Clark Fork at the confluence with Warm Springs Creek, then northwest to Deer Lodge. Near Deer Lodge it receives the Little Blackfoot River. From Deer Lodge it flows generally northwest across western Montana, passing south of the Garnet Range toward Missoula. Five miles east of Missoula, the river receives the Blackfoot River.

Northwest of Missoula, the river continues through a long valley along the northeast flank of the Bitterroot Range, through the Lolo National Forest. It receives the Bitterroot River from the south-southwest approximately 5.5 miles (8.9 km) west of downtown Missoula. Along the Cabinet Mountains the river receives the Flathead River from the east near Paradise. It receives the Thompson River from the north near Thompson Falls in southern Sanders County.

At Noxon, Montana, along the Cabinet Mountains and the northern end of the Bitterroots near the Idaho border, the river is impounded by the Noxon Rapids Dam to form a 20-mile-long (32 km) reservoir. It crosses into eastern Bonner County in north Idaho between the towns of Heron, Montana and the town of Cabinet, Idaho. Approximately 8 miles (13 km) west of the Idaho–Montana border, the river enters the north eastern end of Lake Pend Oreille, near the town of Clark Fork.

History

The mouth of the Clark Fork on Lake Pend Oreille in Idaho

During the last ice age, from approximately 20,000 years ago, the Clark Fork Valley lay along the southern edge of the Cordilleran ice sheet covering western North America. The encroachment of the ice sheet formed an ice dam on the river, creating Glacial Lake Missoula which stretched through the Clark Fork Valley across central Montana. The periodic rupturing and rebuilding of the ice dam released the Missoula Floods, a series of catastrophic floods down the Clark Fork and Pend Oreille into the Columbia which sculpted many of the geographic features of eastern Washington and the Willamette Valley of Oregon.

In the 19th century the Clark Fork Valley was inhabited by the Flathead tribe of Native Americans. It was explored by Meriwether Lewis of the Lewis and Clark Expedition during the 1806 return trip from the Pacific. The river is named for William Clark. A middle segment of the river in Montana was formerly known as the Missoula River. The river was also referred to as the Deer Lodge River by Granville Stuart.

In 1809, David Thompson of the North West Company explored the region and founded several fur trading posts, including Kullyspell House at the mouth of the Clark Fork, and Saleesh House on the river near the present-day site of Thompson Falls, Montana. Thompson used the name Saleesh River for the entire Flathead-Clark Fork-Pend Oreille river system.[13] For most of the first half of the 19th century the Clark Fork river and surrounding region was controlled by the British-Canadian North West Company and Hudson's Bay Company.

In the mid-19th Century the Clark Fork River wound through the valley where cattle had replaced bison. This was when Conrad Kohrs purchased a ranch from Johnny Grant that is now called the Grant-Kohrs Ranch,[14] a National Historic Site and Federal Park. For a history of the river and the people, see Grant-Kohrs family and history of Clark Fork River region.

The Clark Fork and the Blackfoot River experienced a record flood in 1908.[15]

Since the late 19th century many areas in the watershed of the river have been extensively mined for minerals, resulting in an ongoing stream pollution problem. Most pollution has come from the copper mines in Butte and the smelter in Anaconda. Many of the most polluted areas have been designated as Superfund sites. Nevertheless, the river and its tributaries are among the most popular destinations for fly fishing in the United States.

Today, the Clark Fork watershed encompasses the largest Superfund site in America. As a mega-site, it includes three major sites: Butte, Anaconda, and Milltown Dam/Clark Fork River's Milltown Reservoir Superfund Site. Each of these major sites is split up into numerous sub-sites known as Operable Units. Remediation and/or restoration of these sites is ongoing.

Conservation


See also

Additional reading

References

  1. Google Earth elevation for GNIS Silver Bow Creek source coordinates.
  2. 1 2 "Silver Bow Creek". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey., USGS GNIS.
  3. Google Earth elevation for GNIS Warm Springs Creek source coordinates.
  4. "Warm Springs Creek (Montana)". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey., USGS GNIS.
  5. Google Earth elevation for GNIS Clark Fork source coordinates.
  6. 1 2 3 "Clark Fork". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey., USGS GNIS.
  7. Google Earth elevation for GNIS Clark Fork mouth coordinates.
  8. "Pend Oreille subbasin overview" (PDF)., Northwest Power and Conservation Council.
  9. "Montana Water Resources Data 2004"., file "Mill Creek above Bassoo Creek, near Niarada to Clark Fork at Whitehorse Rapids, near Cabinet, ID" (PDF)..
  10. "Clark Fork Info". Clark Fork Watershed Education Program. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  11. "Mount Evans, Montana". Peakbagger. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  12. "Stream Access in Montana".
  13. Nisbet, Jack (1994). Sources of the River: Tracking David Thompson Across Western North America. Sasquatch Books. pp. 144–145, 149, 159. ISBN 1-57061-522-5.
  14. "Grant-Kohrs Ranch, National Historic Site". Retrieved 5 September 2013.
  15. "The Great Flood of 1908". Retrieved 2014-01-05.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clark Fork (river).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.