Prairie Creek (California)

Prairie Creek
river
Prairie Creek within the aboriginal forest of Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park is shaded by an overstory of towering redwoods, an understory of riparian hardwoods, and the ferns and mosses of fallen trees on the forest floor.
Country United States
State California
Region Humboldt County
Source
 - coordinates 41°26′46″N 124°02′26″W / 41.44611°N 124.04056°W / 41.44611; -124.04056 [1]
Mouth Redwood Creek
 - elevation 39 ft (12 m)
 - coordinates 41°17′59″N 124°03′02″W / 41.29972°N 124.05056°W / 41.29972; -124.05056Coordinates: 41°17′59″N 124°03′02″W / 41.29972°N 124.05056°W / 41.29972; -124.05056 [1]
Length 9 mi (14 km)

Prairie Creek is the Redwood Creek tributary drainage basin including the inland portion of Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park. Prairie Creek drains southerly through a Plio-Pleistocene non-marine sedimentary and metasedimentary formation to a confluence with Redwood Creek approximately one mile upstream of Orick, California. The southern half of the channel exposes the Franciscan Assemblage and the lower reaches flow through Quaternary alluvium of the Redwood Creek estuarine floodplain. Prairie Creek was closely followed by U.S. Route 101 from Orick to the Klamath River drainage divide.[2] The former highway alignment through the park has been designated the Newton B. Drury Scenic Parkway; through traffic now follows a new alignment along the easterly drainage basin headwall.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Prairie Creek
  2. Strand, Rudolph G. Geologic Map of California:Weed Sheet (1963) State of California Resources Agency
  3. DeLorme California Atlas and Gazetteer (1st edition) (2008) ISBN 0-89933-383-4 map 22

See also


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