Over the past dozen years, a number of large dams in the Pacific Northwest have been removed in an effort to restore riverine ecosystems and dependent species like salmon. These dam removals provide perhaps the best example of large-scale environmental remediation in the 21st century. This restoration, however, has occurred on a case-by-case basis, without a comprehensive plan. Yet the result has been to put into motion ongoing rehabilitation efforts in four distinct river basins: the Elwah and White Salmon in Washington and the Sandy and Rogue in Oregon. In all, nine significant dams have been removed, and four more — in the contentious Klamath Basin of Oregon and California — are slated for removal in within the next decade. This article ...
Master of ArtsDepartment of GeographyLisa M.B. HarringtonWhile environmental concerns have played a ...
The text describes some selected previous and current dam removal efforts and onedam failure in the ...
Presented at The Oregon Water Conference, May 24-25, 2011, Corvallis, OR.With the convergence of sev...
Dam removal is a new and rapidly growing phenomenon that is reshaping watersheds across the United S...
On the 15th of September 2011, officials in Olympic National Park, Washington, in the USA, began the...
51 pagesDuring western expansion, dams helped settlers conquer nature and develop the frontier. Oreg...
Dam removal or breaching (partial removal) is an increasingly common remedy for fishpassage, habitat...
One of the nation’s most longstanding environmental-energy conflicts concerns the plight of numerous...
When the United States was a young nation, and its natural resources were perceived as endless, dams...
This paper examines the Elwha River Restoration Project and specifically the issue of dam removal on...
Snake River salmon, historically constituting the most abundant salmon runs in the Columbia River Ba...
Dams, once considered by many to be good for water development in the Western U.S., might not be a p...
Dams are pervasive features of the river systems in the United States. More than 80,000 large dams, ...
This paper aims to explain the multiple factors that contributed to a 2010 agreement to remove four ...
With $182 million of U.S. federal funds committed, the Elwha River Restoration Project is the larges...
Master of ArtsDepartment of GeographyLisa M.B. HarringtonWhile environmental concerns have played a ...
The text describes some selected previous and current dam removal efforts and onedam failure in the ...
Presented at The Oregon Water Conference, May 24-25, 2011, Corvallis, OR.With the convergence of sev...
Dam removal is a new and rapidly growing phenomenon that is reshaping watersheds across the United S...
On the 15th of September 2011, officials in Olympic National Park, Washington, in the USA, began the...
51 pagesDuring western expansion, dams helped settlers conquer nature and develop the frontier. Oreg...
Dam removal or breaching (partial removal) is an increasingly common remedy for fishpassage, habitat...
One of the nation’s most longstanding environmental-energy conflicts concerns the plight of numerous...
When the United States was a young nation, and its natural resources were perceived as endless, dams...
This paper examines the Elwha River Restoration Project and specifically the issue of dam removal on...
Snake River salmon, historically constituting the most abundant salmon runs in the Columbia River Ba...
Dams, once considered by many to be good for water development in the Western U.S., might not be a p...
Dams are pervasive features of the river systems in the United States. More than 80,000 large dams, ...
This paper aims to explain the multiple factors that contributed to a 2010 agreement to remove four ...
With $182 million of U.S. federal funds committed, the Elwha River Restoration Project is the larges...
Master of ArtsDepartment of GeographyLisa M.B. HarringtonWhile environmental concerns have played a ...
The text describes some selected previous and current dam removal efforts and onedam failure in the ...
Presented at The Oregon Water Conference, May 24-25, 2011, Corvallis, OR.With the convergence of sev...