The Puyallup River ( ) is a river in the U.S. state of Washington. About long, it is formed by on the west side of Mount Rainier. It flows generally northwest, emptying into Commencement Bay, part of Puget Sound. The river and its tributaries drain an area of about in Pierce County and southern King County.
The lower, northwestern half of the river's drainage basin is a complex amalgam of glacial and tectonic features dating back to the Pleistocene, as well as more recent (Holocene) changes caused by a series of Lahar which flowed down from Mount Rainier between 5,600 and 800 years Before Present. The valley's 150,000 residents are at risk from future lahars. For this reason, the United States Geological Survey has installed a lahar warning system.
The main valley flows north from Electron along a lateral meltwater channel (a meltwater channel formed along the edge of a glacier) and into a larger subglacial meltwater channel (formed beneath the glacier), collecting the Carbon River on the way to Alderton and Sumner. At Sumner, the Puyallup River is joined by the White River and the valley splits in two, with the Lower Puyallup River Valley leading west-northwest to Commencement Bay along a fault trace associated with the Tacoma Fault Zone, and the Duwamish Valley continuing north along the purely glacial channel towards Seattle. At present, the Puyallup River follows the Lower Puyallup River Valley northwest past the cities of Puyallup and Fife, and through the Puyallup Indian Reservation, before emptying into Commencement Bay at the Port of Tacoma, part of the city of Tacoma.General course info from and http://www.topozone.com
The lower watershed (downstream of Electron) is much younger than the upper watershed: a combination of glacial and tectonic features less than 20,000 years old as well as changes caused by the Osceola Mudflow and younger Lahar between 5,600 years Before Present and today. The main valley was originally part of a much larger lateral meltwater channel network formed during the Vashon Glaciation, which drained large portions of the Puget Sound Area as well as most of Washington's Cascade Range south into the Chehalis River prior to the unblocking of the Strait of Juan de Fuca around 14,800 years Before Present. After the retreat of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet allowed Puget Sound to connect with the Pacific Ocean through the Strait, the channel network fragmented into a collection of large, independent river valleys draining into Puget Sound. The Puyallup River's portion consisted of small section of lateral meltwater channel between Lake Kapowsin and Orting, a primary subglacial channel running north from Orting through the Duwamish Valley to Lake Washington, and a channel fork which split off at Sumner to follow a tectonic fault associated with the Tacoma Fault.
At the end of the Vashon Glaciation, the majority of the valley in the lower watershed was dry: sea levels were 150 meters (490 feet) lower than they are today, although the land between Tacoma and Electron was also up to 30 meters (100 feet) lower due to the ice sheet's weight, and the shore of Puget Sound was likely at or very near Browns Point, almost 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) northwest of its present location. As both sea level and land level recovered from the glaciation, the valley flooded and became a saltwater embayment of Puget Sound which extended through the Puyallup and Duwamish Valleys from Kenmore, Washington, on what is now Lake Washington, to Orting at the foothills of the Cascade Range. Sediment from the Puyallup River, Carbon River, and White River steadily built up in the valley through the early Holocene, and by approximately 5,700 years Before Present the valley was filled in to Sumner, separating the Duwamish Valley from the fork running west-northwest to Tacoma. The Puyallup River split, emptying into Puget Sound to both the north and the west. Starting around 5,600 years Before Present and continuing to 800 years Before Present, a series of large Lahar from Mount Rainier flowed down the Puyallup River and White River watersheds and filled in the Puyallup and Duwamish Valleys, creating the present landscape.
Today, the Puyallup River and its tributaries are still fed by the glaciers of Mount Rainier. These glaciers continually provide sediment such as silt and gravel to the rivers, creating sand and gravel bars. The thick sediment deposits in the lower water capacity, which causes the river to meander and flood during periods of high streamflow. It also causes the rivers to become Braided river and . During the summer, glacial meltwater dominates the streamflow, turning the Puyallup River Turbidity. In addition, the glaciers delay the onset of spring-summer Surface runoff, compared to unglaciated river basins.
Historically, these factors resulted in frequent flooding and extensive floodplain , and provided a rich and complex habitat for fish and other animals. In addition, the river's mouth at Commencement Bay occupied an extensive tidal flat and wetland estuary delta. Urbanization and an extensive system of flood control structures such as dams, levees, and culverts, have radically altered much of the Puyallup River and its tributaries. The estuary delta at the mouth of the Puyallup River has been almost completely replaced with the facilities of the Port of Tacoma, with less than 5% of the original estuarine habitat remaining.
A fall run of chinook salmon occurs on the river. Coho salmon, Chum salmon, and pink salmon are also found in the river, along with Rainbow trout, sea-run coastal cutthroat trout, and a threatened species, bull trout. Sockeye salmon are considered indigenous to the basin, but are rarely seen today.
The Puyallup tribe continues to maintain several buildings and properties on reservation lands near the mouth of the river. They are stakeholders in many issues about the river, such as the amount of water diverted at Electron Diversion Dam.
The first known European to explore the Puyallup River valley was William Fraser Tolmie, who in August 1833 made a journey to the Mount Rainier area via the Puyallup and Mowich river valleys. Two Native American guides accompanied Tolmie, Lachalet, a Nisqually Indian, and Nuckalkat, a Puyallup.
River modifications
History
See also
External links
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