Deadman Creek is the mainstream creek that becomes the Owens River where Big Springs enters the Deadman Creek channel, "two miles east of the [CalTrans] US395 Crestview maintenance station",[1] near Deadman Summit.[1] The Sierra Crest demarcates the creek's drainage from the drainage of the Middle Fork San Joaquin River on the west.[2]
Deadman Creek (Owens River tributary) | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
District | Mono County, California |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | San Joaquin Mountain |
• coordinates | 37°43′12″N 119°05′58″W / 37.719914°N 119.09935°W |
Mouth | Owens River |
• location | creek & Big Springs confluence |
• coordinates | 37°45′01″N 118°56′20″W / 37.75028°N 118.93889°W |
Basin features | |
River system | Crowley Lake Watershed |
Designated | March 30, 2009 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Upper Owens River Basin" (PDF). Planning Division: Mono County Community Development Department. March 2007. p. 113. Archived from the original (pdf) on 2010-06-19. Retrieved 2010-06-15.
The headwaters of Deadman Creek are on the eastern slope of San Joaquin Mountain. Deadman Creek begins from dozens to perhaps hundreds of springs and seeps. The Inyo National Forest has documented 58 spring/seep systems in the headwaters of Deadman Creek, and 95 percent of these appear to be perennial. The creek flows east through Jeffrey pine forest and then through sagebrush flats to Big Springs, where the Owens River starts. The flat area is composed of pumice, and the channel in this area loses most of the water to infiltration (Kondolf and Vorster, 1992). ... The upper Owens River begins where Big Springs enters the channel of Deadman Creek about two miles east of the Crestview maintenance station on U.S. Highway 395.
- ^ "Google Map". Retrieved 2010-06-15.