Scientists consider dams’ impact on river

Long thought tamed, the Elwha River is proving to hold a few last surprises for scientists.

The river, despite being dammed for nearly a century, has never quite lost its wild side, said Amy Draut, a U.S. Geological Survey research geologist.

Draut has spent the past five years studying the river, poring over maps and aerial photos, and paying close attention to the ebb and flow of this long, restrained stream.

To her surprise, she found the river downstream of its two dams to not be quite as docile as might be expected.

“It’s a really dynamic system,” Draut said. “It changes really fast.”

The USGS study is the first on a dam’s influence on an “anabranching river,” she said.

Such rivers are noted for having branches that divert from the main stem and later reconnect downstream.

Dams’ impact

The dams have never been used for flood control, but they still have an impact on a river by trapping sediment.

The silt can influence a river’s direction when deposited along its banks, Draut said.

It also increases erosion.

For instance, the stream 2.5 miles downstream from the Elwha Dam — located at river mile 5 — is armored with large, coarse rocks.

That makes it much more stable and is a result of fine sediment being trapped behind the dams.

“The coarser the grain size . . . the harder it is for the channel to move,” Draut said.

The researcher said she expected much more of the river downstream to have those traits.

But instead, the last 2.5 miles of the stream have shown little influence from the dams and have changed dramatically over the past 80 years. (There are no reliable maps of the river before the dam was built in 1913.)

Carved through floodplain

Like a dissatisfied sculptor, the river has ceaselessly carved its way through the floodplain, ever changing its direction and creating and destroying swaths of land in the process.

“It’s nothing like it was in the 1930s,” she said, noting that it has moved hundreds of meters in some areas.

Draut said the large amounts of fine sediment that still exist in the valley make that possible.

“The channel is cannibalizing its own floodplain,” she said.

How the river will change when the Elwha and Glines Canyon dams are removed has not been modeled.

Draut said it’s likely that an uncontrolled stream carry­ing large amounts of fresh sediment would lead to the creation of new chann­els and overall make the river even less predictable.

“We could see parts of the floodplain become even more mobile and more dynamic than they are now,” she said.

Tribe ready

This is a reality that the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe has been preparing for and, in some ways, welcoming, said Robert Elofson, the tribe’s river restoration program manager.

The tribe’s reservation is located in the floodplain, where about 400 members live.

But Elofson said the tribe does not think the river is going to be a hazard, once freed.

The levee on the reservation has been extended by up to 1,500 feet and reinforced in preparation for dam removal, making them “better protected” than ever, he said.

Plus, the tribe has given the river plenty of room to grow.

As much as 400 out of the 850 acres the tribe owns in the floodplain have been set aside for the river.

Further restraining the stream is one of the last things the tribe, which has long awaited the demolition of the two dams, would want to do, Elofson said, adding:

“We have always felt with the river, from dependency for subsistence and culture and history for so many centuries; we still feel the river is very important.”

________

Reporter Tom Callis can be reached at 360-417-3532 or at tom.callis@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Peninsula boards to discuss timber, budgets

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Electronic edition of newspaper set Tuesday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition only… Continue reading

Veterans Day ceremony set at Port Angeles High School

The Clallam County Veterans Association will host a Veterans… Continue reading

Suggs flips Port Angeles council race, leads by 10 votes

Sanders maintains lead for position OMC board

Steve Burke.
Auditors: PA pool lacks controls

Report: Director benefitted financially over 6-year period

Community Services Director Melody Sky Weaver at the Port Townsend Carnegie Library. The library will receive a $10,000 gift from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the foundation founded by industrialist Andrew Carnegie. The library was opened in 1913 and the gift is to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Port Townsend, Port Angeles libraries to receive $10K as part of celebration

Corporation to provide funding in honor of country’s 250th birthday

One dies in collision on Hood Canal Bridge

Trooper says driver attempted U-turn at midspan

Port Townsend city employees work to clean up the Evans Vista homeless encampment on Thursday. The city hired Leland Construction of Roy to help with the process, which was initiated by the Port Townsend City Council in September. The city gave camp residents until Monday to vacate the premises and began the sweep of the area on Thursday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Camp cleanup

Port Townsend city employees work to clean up the Evans Vista homeless… Continue reading

Hospital projects a $7.5M loss in ’26

Interim CEO says it’s cash flow positive

Port Angeles council expects $189M in revenue sources for 2026

Finance director explains funds, from general to taxes to utilities

Taylor gains three votes in Port Angeles City Council race

Hammar maintains lead for position on Port Angeles school board

Rufina C. Garay.
Port Townsend names second poet laureate

Garay appointed following recommendation from panel