FORTY-FIRST BIENNIAL REPORT 87 



Feather River, South Fork, Plumas County. Wyandotte Irrigation District. 

 Hydi'oelectric power and irrigation project involving two dams (at Little 

 Grass Valley and above present Lost Creek Reservoir) with storage capacity 

 of 120,000 acre feet with accompanying conduits and powerhouses. 



Lake Almanor, Plumas County. Pacific Gas and Electric Company. Dam 

 forming Lake Almanor, a storage reservoir on the North Fork of the Feather 

 River. The company plans to raise this reservoir to an elevation of 4,500 feet 

 if conditions are found to be safe. Exploration drilling at the dam now in 

 progress. 



Sacramento River Canals, Tehama, Glenn and Butte Counties. U. S. Bureau 

 of Reclamation. Irrigation project with power and pumping features. A study 

 of the possibility of utilizing about 120 miles of proposed canals diverting 

 water from the Sacramento River for productive trout water open to public 

 fishing is being conducted in cooperation with the Bureau of Reclamation and 

 the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 



Sacramento River, Tehama County. U. S. Corps of Engineers. Storage reser- 

 voir at Iron Canyon. 



Keswick Dam, Shasta County. U. S. Bureau of Reclamation. Fluctuation 

 contrgl dam for Shasta Dam. This problem is complicated by copper pollution. 



Silver Creek, El Dorado County. U. S. Bureau of Reclamation. Union Valley 

 dam. Ice House Diversion dam, several power houses and minor diversion 

 dams which would affect South Fork Silver, Big Silver, and main Silver 

 creeks have been proposed. 



Middle Fork Stanislaus River, Tuolumne County. South San Joaquin and 

 Oakdale Irrigation Districts. Hydroelectric power and irrigation projects 

 involving large dams and reservoirs at Beardsley and Donnells Flats, with 

 accompanying conduits and powerhouses, which would affect sections of the 

 Middle Fork Stanislaus River. 



Park Creek, El Dorado County. U. S. Bureau of Reclamation. Proposed Sly 

 Park Reservoir and Camp Creek diversion for irrigation and domestic water 

 supplies. 



North Fork Stanislaus River, Tuolumne County. Pacific Gas and Electric 

 Company. Involving Federal Power Commission licensing of existing dams at 

 Lake Alpine, Union, Utica, and Hunters Reservoirs for hydroelectric power 

 purposes. 



Cache Creek and Clear Lake, Lake County. U. S. Army, Corps of Engineers. 

 Dams on Kelsey Creek, Cache Creek, and North Fork Cache Creek for flood 

 control and irrigation. Will affect creeks named and Clear Lake. 



Middle Fork Eel River, Mendocino County. G. L. Carrico. Hydroelectric and 

 irrigation project involving large dams on the Middle Fork Eel River, a tribu- 

 tary of the North Fork Eel River, and a tributary of the Middle Fork Eel 

 River, with accompanying conduits. Would affect sections of the Middle Fork 

 Eel River and tributaries of the Middle and North Forks. 



South Fork Eel River, Mendocino County. U. S. Army, Corps of Engineers. 

 Flood control and summer flow maintenance dam. Would affect South Fork 

 Eel River and Eel River. 



San Joaquin River, Fresno/Madera Counties. Southern California Edison Com- 

 pany. Hydroelectric power project involving a large dam (No. 7) and reservoir 

 above the mouth of Willow Creek, with accompanying conduit and powerhouse 

 (No. 4), which would affect 11 miles of the San Joaquin River. 



Big Dry Creek, Fresno County. U. S. Army, Corps of Engineers. The Big Dry 

 Creek flood control project involves a dam, dikes and reservoir for which a 

 permanent pool for warm-water fish was recommended. 



Mono Creek, Fresno County. Southern California Edison Company. Hydro- 

 electric power project involving a large dam and reservoir at Vermilion Valley, 

 which would affect most of the easily accessible section of Mono Creek. 



Kings River, Fresno County. U. S. Army, Corps of Engineers. The Pine Flat 

 multiple purpose project, predominantly flood control, involves a large dam 

 and reservoir at Pine Flat which will affect directly the lower portion of the 

 Kings River, but which through re-regulation of discharge permits hydro- 

 electric development upstream and thus indirectly will affect the entire Kings 

 River drainage. 



