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KRIS Navarro : Picture Page

Area North Fork
Topic Tour: Flynn Creek High Winter Flow Photos 2002
 

12_31_02_207a_flynn_sm.jpg 39K  Click on image to enlarge (39K).  Click here to display a larger version (262K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek several miles above its mouth, during high flows at 1 P.M. on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. This photograph was taken from the road above the next three photographs. There are three dead trees in the channel. Aggradation is a possible cause of death for the trees. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.


12_31_02_204a_flynn_sm.jpg 36K  Click on image to enlarge (36K).  Click here to display a larger version (250K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek several miles above its mouth, during high flows at 1 P.M. on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. The two douglas-fir trees in the middle of the channel are dead and decaying, possibly as a result of aggradation. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.


12_31_02_205a_flynn_sm.jpg 33K  Click on image to enlarge (33K).  Click here to display a larger version (240K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek several miles above its mouth, during high flows at 1pm on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. This photograph was taken approximately twenty feet upstream of the previous picture. The dead Douglas fir at the left side of the photo is the same tree as the one in the center of the previous photo. The redwood tree at the edge of the right third of the photo is dead. Aggradation is a possible cause of death for both trees. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.


12_31_02_206a_flynn_sm.jpg 32K  Click on image to enlarge (32K).  Click here to display a larger version (320K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek several miles above its mouth, during high flows at 1pm on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. This photograph was taken from the same location as previous picture, but is shot towards the sky rather than level. The dead Douglas fir at the left side of the photo (broken top) and the dead redwood at center of the photo are the same trees as the center of the previous picture. Aggradation is a possible cause of death for both trees. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.


12_31_02_208a_flynn128..jpg 253K  Click on image to enlarge (253K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek, look upstream several hundred feet above its mouth, during high flows at 1 P.M. on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. The creek had spilled over its banks and flooded adjacent vegetation. This photo was taken at the same location as the next photo. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.


12_31_02_209a_flynn128_sm.jpg 39K  Click on image to enlarge (39K).  Click here to display a larger version (282K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek, look downstream several hundred feet above its mouth, during high flows at 1 P.M. on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. The creek had spilled over its banks and flooded adjacent vegetation. This photo was taken at the same location as the previous photo. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.


12_31_02_210a_flynn128_sm.jpg 31K  Click on image to enlarge (31K).  Click here to display a larger version (221K).

This photo shows Flynn Creek, look upstream from the highway 128 bridge just upstream from its mouth, during high flows at 1 P.M. on December 31, 2002, when the Navarro River was flowing at approximately 11,000 cubic feet per second. The creek had spilled over its banks and flooded adjacent vegetation. The blurred object in the foreground is the bridge railing. Photo was taken by Eli Asarian.




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