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KRIS Klamath : Picture Page
Area | Lower Klamath/Basin-wide |
Topic | Tour: Yurok Reservation Ah Pah Creek Erosion Control |
Click on image to enlarge (57K). A Yurok Tribal Restoration Technician surveys a headwater tributary to Ah Pah Creek. A debris torrent from the road crossing at the top of the photo has moved down and caused about 12 feet of deposition at a road crossing in the foreground. The debris torrent continued downstream to the mainstem of Ah Pah Creek. Photo courtesy of the Yurok Tribe Watershed Restoration Division. Use Pan function or click Fit to see whole image. Press F1 for help in use of Picture tools.
A Yurok Tribal member excavates an old stream crossing in Ah Pah Creek to reduce sediment inputs to the stream. Photo courtesy of the Yurok Tribe Watershed Restoration Division.
An excavator retrieving side cast material over the edge of a road cut along Ah Pah Creek as part of the Yurok watershed restoration program. Photo courtesy of theYurok Tribe Watershed Restoration Division.
An excavator retrieving side cast material over the edge of a road along Ah Pah Creek as part of the Yurok watershed restoration program. Photo courtesy of Yurok Tribe Watershed Restoration Division.
A trainee in the Yurok Tribal restoration program learns how to operate heavy equipment to reduce erosion potential in the Lower Klamath Basin. This excavator is retrieving side cast material over the edge of a road along Ah Pah Creek. Photo courtesy of the Yurok Tribe Watershed Restoration Division.
Heavy equipment along an old logging road in the Ah Pah Creek watershed. The equipment is being used to reduce erosion potential in the Lower Klamath Basin. Photo courtesy of Yurok Tribe Watershed Restoration Division.
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