Mount Diablo Creek Explained

Mount Diablo Creek
Name Other:Arroyo del Monte Diablo
Pushpin Map:California
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of mouth
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:California
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:Contra Costa County
Length:14.3miles
Source1:Northern flank of Mount Diablo
Source1 Coordinates:37.9181°N -121.8769°W
Source1 Elevation:1155feet
Mouth:Seal Creek tidelands on southern shore of Suisun Bay
Mouth Location:5.20NaN0 east of Martinez
Mouth Coordinates:36.9003°N -121.5867°W
Mouth Elevation:7feet
Tributaries Left:Donner Creek, Mitchell Creek
Tributaries Right:Peacock Creek

Mount Diablo Creek is a 14.3adj=midNaNadj=mid[1] northwest-flowing stream originating on the north flank of Mount Diablo. Its dozen small tributaries gather near Clayton before flowing through Concord and the Concord Naval Weapons Station, ultimately ending in tidelands on the southern shore of Suisun Bay in Contra Costa County. If the Concord Naval Weapons Station is converted to protected wildlands, Mount Diablo Creek may serve as the last wildlife corridor for black-tailed deer, tule elk, and other mammals from Mount Diablo to Suisun Bay.[2]

History

The name Monte del Diablo (Spanish for devil's grove) was recorded about 1824 for a Native American rancheria. It is reported that a fight between Spanish soldiers and Native Americans too place in 1806 by a thicket near the site of what is now Pacheco, and the soldiers believe a grotesquely dressed Native American medicine man was the devil. The creek's Spanish name was Arroyo del Monte Diablo.[3] Americans later applied the name Mount Diablo to the peak, and the creek.[4]

Watershed and Course

Mount Diablo Creek is an intermittent stream that begins on the north flank of Mount Diablo, specifically the north flank of North Peak. It flows northwesterly, drawing from about a dozen tributaries that join it in or near Clayton. The Mount Diablo Creek watershed drains 56sqmi.[5] Of its dozen tributaries, the larger are Donner Creek which joins from the left, then Peacock Creek which joins from the right, then Mitchell Creek which flows 4miles from the Eagle Peak to join Mount Diablo Creek from the left. The 12800acres Concord Naval Weapons Station encompasses the lower third of the watershed and is divided into the 7,630-acre Tidal Area and the 5,170-acre Inland Area. The City of Concord is developing a re-use plan for the Inland Area in partnership with the County and the East Bay Regional Park District (EBRPD), as the U.S. Navy transferred the Inland Area to the City of Concord in 2018.[6] The mouth of Mount Diablo Creek is its confluence with Seal Creek in the tidal wetlands. Seal Creek joins Hastings Slough before entering Suisun Bay, an upstream component of greater San Francisco Bay.

The roughly dozen named tributaries of Mount Diablo Creek are Deer Flat Creek, Donner Creek (and its Back Creek subtributary), Goethels Canyon, Peacock Creek (and its Irish Creek subtributary), Mitchell Creek, Russelmann Creek, Seal Creek, Uncle Sam Canyon, and Wild Oat Canyon.[7]

Ecology and Conservation

Mount Diablo Creek and its Mitchell Creek tributary have hosted spawning runs of anadromous steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) as evidenced by fish surveys over several decades. Although intermittent flows limit much of the creek for steelhead excepting a few perennial pools and short reaches, the creek is unusual as it has no fish passage barriers.[5] Mitchell Creek also supports federally endangered California red-legged frog (Rana draytonii).[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed February 16, 2024
  2. Mount Diablo State Park Road and Trail Management Plan . California State Parks . January 1, 2016 . February 16, 2024.
  3. Book: Durham's Place-Names of the San Francisco Bay Area . David L. Durham . 2000 . Word Dancer Press . Clovis, California . 114 .
  4. Book: 1000 California Place Names: Their Origin and Meaning . Erwin Gustav Gudde . 1949 . University of California Press . Berkeley, California . 23 .
  5. Historical distribution and current status of steelhead/rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in streams of the San Francisco Estuary, California- Contra Costa County . R. A. Leidy, G.S. Becker, B.N. Harvey . 2005 . Center for Ecosystem Management and Restoration . Oakland, California . February 17, 2024.
  6. Contra Costa Watersheds Stormwater Resource Plan . Contra Costa County . November 1, 2019 . February 16, 2024.
  7. Guide to San Francisco Bay Area Creeks- Mt. Diablo Creek Watershed . Oakland Museum Maps . February 16, 2024 .