| Calaveras River | |
|---|---|
New Hogan Lake, the main reservoir on the Calaveras River | |
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| Location | |
| Country | United States |
| State | California |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | Confluence of North and South Forks |
| • location | West ofSan Andreas |
| • coordinates | 38°11′50″N120°43′12″W / 38.19722°N 120.72000°W /38.19722; -120.72000[1] |
| • elevation | 705 ft (215 m) |
| Mouth | San Joaquin River |
• location | NearStockton |
• coordinates | 37°58′01″N121°22′04″W / 37.96694°N 121.36778°W /37.96694; -121.36778[1] |
| Length | 51.9 mi (83.5 km) |
| Basin size | 470 sq mi (1,200 km2) |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Jenny Lind, CA |
| • average | 225 cu ft/s (6.4 m3/s) |
| • minimum | 0 cu ft/s (0 m3/s) |
| • maximum | 50,000 cu ft/s (1,400 m3/s) |
TheCalaveras River is ariver in theSan Joaquin Valley ofCalifornia.
It flows roughly southwest for 51.9 miles (83.5 km) from the confluence of its north and south forks inCalaveras County to its confluence with theSan Joaquin River in the city ofStockton.[2]
In the past, it has been used for agriculture and irrigation, drinking water, and for recreational purposes. There have been many improvement projects on the Calaveras River to address its pollution and efficiency for local residents.
The Spanish wordcalaveras means "skulls." The river was said to have been named by Spanish explorerGabriel Moraga in 1806 when he found many skulls of Native Americans along its banks. He believed they had either died of famine or been killed in tribal conflicts over hunting and fishing grounds.
Later, human remains were of the nativeMiwuk people killed by Spanish soldiers after they banded together to rise against Spanish missionaries. TheStanislaus River is named for Estanislau, a coastal Miwuk who escaped from Mission San Jose in the late 1830s. He is reported to have raised a small group of men with crude weapons, hiding in the foothills when the Spanish attacked. The Miwuk were quickly decimated by Spanish gunfire.
In 1836,John Marsh,Jose Noriega, and a party of men, went exploring in Northern California. They made camp along a river bed in the evening, and when they woke up the next morning, discovered that they had camped in the midst of a great quantity of skulls and bones. They also gave the river the appropriate name: Calaveras.[3][4][5]
New Hogan Lake is the onlylake on the river. It is formed byNew Hogan Dam, which was completed in 1963. The dam was built by theUnited States Army Corps of Engineers, primarily forflood control. The dam also providesdrinking water, water forirrigation,hydroelectricity andrecreation, includingfishing,camping,swimming andwater skiing.

Downstream from the Calaveras River is Mildred Island, a submerged island that also provides recreation such as fishing.[6]
The Mormon Slough, adistributary of the Calaveras, splits away about five miles east ofLinden, California. In east Stockton, the Stockton Diverting Canal reconnects the Mormon Slough and the Calaveras.Downstream from thisflood control channel, the often dryMormon Slough continues on its southerly path, through downtown, to theStockton Channel. The Calaveras makes a northerly arc, passing through farmland, orchards, and theUniversity of the Pacific Stockton Campus, then alongside itsnamesake Brookside district, before flowing into theDeepwater Channel about three miles downriver from the Mormon Slough. Thus much of central Stockton, being completely surrounded by these waterways, is itself one of the manyriver islands which make up theSan Joaquin Delta.

TheSacramento River meets theSan Joaquin River in what is known as"The Delta" betweenLodi, California, and theCarquinez Strait. A delta is a geographical feature where river water branches out into a large, flat area. However, theSacramento-San Joaquin Delta is somewhat special case because, after splitting intomultiple channels as water flows downstream, those waterwayscome back together again and flow intoSuisun Bay, and eventuallySan Francisco Bay.[7]
Hundreds of thousands of people are licensed to fish in the Bay Area and Delta regions, and 90% of people from low-income communities depend on fish from these rivers for food.[8] The Calaveras River has various species of fish that people catch, eat, and even some that are federally protected such as steelhead and rainbow trout.[9]
Since theCalifornia Gold Rush of the Mid-1800s, water running through the state has been introduced to mercury and other industrial chemicals.Per-and Polyfluoroakyl substances (PFAs) are man-made chemicals designed to make products stain and water resistant, but are of concern to the environment because of their difficulty to be decomposed. They are a class of chemicals known as forever chemicals that don’t get degraded well naturally and tend to stay in the environment including in the soil, air, and water.[10]
As the Calaveras River is used for agriculture, use of pesticides and herbicides also impact cleanliness of the water. Although present in small amounts, diazinon and chlorpyrifos are toxic to water life.Organophosphate pesticides are brought to the water by seasonal stormwater runoff. Poor drainage for soils and the amount of pesticides farmers are using affect the water to varying degrees. Since learning about the effect of pesticides, farmers have started to reduce the use of them either by switching to more organic options, diluting the chemicals, etc.[11]
There have been hazardous material spills in the past from maintenance issues such as sewers overflowing as well as recreational accidents such as fuel spills from boats and vehicles.[11]
Cyanobacteria (blue green algae) can grow anywhere in the world, but they are especially harmful when they produce toxins. Producing toxins, blocking sunlight by dense blooms and potentially using up all the oxygen in the water are many ways in which aquatic life is harmed. For the Calaveras River, the first algal bloom was found April 2019 in the New Hogan Reservoir but it was resolved by June 2019.[11]
Many improvement projects have been done in the past to better the Calaveras River for residents and its inhabitants.
In 2014, the Calaveras River was struggling to house natural wildlife because of its past diversions that spread the river water too thin. TheU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service worked with residents to restore bridges and rebuild structures that would serve to connect residents on both sides of the river while not inhibiting the natural migration of fish species, the Caprini Crossing for example.[12] After these restorations, the river was able to produce more salmon and steelhead, considerable amounts for the relatively small system that is the Calaveras River.
In 2020, the Stockton East Water District planned out a program that would protect the threatened Central Valley steelhead, endangeredChinook salmon, and more natural wildlife.[13] They called this the 2020 Calaveras River Conservation Plan. It was the first habitat conservation plan in the Central Valley to be approved by theNational Marine Fisheries Service. The program helped federally protected species and helped to maintain water quality of the Calaveras River.