[Awclist] [Fwd: RRFW Riverwire - NEW RAPIDS APPEAR NEAR FORMER HITE
MARINA]
Thomas Robey
trobey at cybermesa.com
Fri Mar 18 12:06:38 MST 2005
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: RRFW Riverwire - NEW RAPIDS APPEAR NEAR FORMER HITE MARINA
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2005 10:46:37 -0700
From: Riverwire-RRFW <riverwire at rrfw.org>
Reply-To: <riverwire at rrfw.org>
Organization: River Runners for Wilderness
To: riverwire at rrfw.org
RRFW Riverwire - NEW RAPIDS APPEAR NEAR FORMER HITE MARINA
March 18, 2005
Two new rapids have been photographed by a team conducting a
photographic and Global Positioning System (GPS) reconnaissance of the
Colorado River in Cataract, Narrow and Glen canyons, which are now
exposed by drastically reduced water levels at Lake Powell reservoir.
The bigger of the two rapids, about an eight-foot drop, has been
informally called Albert Loper Falls to honor a Colorado River boatman
who once lived in Glen Canyon before inundation by Lake Powell. This new
rapid is located between North and Farley Canyons, approximately 2 miles
downstream of the former Hite Marina, now abandoned.
The survey team was comprised of volunteers John Dohrenwend, Albert
Reichert and John Weisheit in inflatable kayaks and was underwritten by
the non-profit organization Living Rivers/Colorado Riverkeeper to
complete an unfinished segment of a Lake Powell sediment survey that was
initiated the previous fall. This work was a collaboration of university
scientists, an outfitter and volunteer river guides, including
University of Arizona, Utah State University, Tag-A-Long Expeditions,
Colorado Plateau River Guides and Living Rivers/Colorado Riverkeeper.
A smaller rapid has formed just yards upstream of the primitive boat
ramp, which was modified two years ago to accommodate the needs of white
water boaters from Canyonlands National Park. This boat ramp is located
about one mile upriver from the old Hite Marina on the west side of the
river. After a field trip to the area by representatives of the National
Park Service and Utah Guides and Outfitters, a decision was made to
improve the boat ramp to re-align it with the level of the flowing
river, which continues to down cut into the thick sediment deposits of
Lake Powell. Special funding for this improvement at the boat ramp has
been provided by Utah State Parks and Recreation.
As the reservoir continues to fall, the Colorado River chews away the
sediment deposited when the reservoir was full, carving out a new river
bed that is suspended over bedrock features such as the divides between
side canyons and the flat benches that were once canyon rims. Eventually
the current strikes these bedrock formations which cause rapids, such as
these two, to form. These rapids can be viewed at www.riverguides.org
(click on River News: New Rapid in Glen Canyon
<http://www.riverguides.org/programs/cprg/article.cfm?NewsID=653> on the
left side Headlines menu). These excellent shots also feature a good
overview of the new takeout for river runners.
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