Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1630
Citation Smith, FR and Vanbuskirk, CD. 2002. Landslide risk analysis of historic forest development in the interior of British Columbia - Challenges encountered at Fall Creek. Technical Report 003. Ministry of Forests and Range.
Organization FLNRO
URL http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfd/pubs/Docs/Tr/Tr003/Smith.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords In June 1990, the Fall Creek area east of Enderby, B.C., experienced about
66 landslides. These landslides impacted forested slopes and forestry roads,
destroyed several BC Hydro transmission towers, damaged and destroyed
houses, and cut off highway access to the area, resulting in the evacuation
of residents. These slides also destroyed a fi sh farm, several licensed water
intakes, and impacted on the Shuswap River (salmon spawning habitat). The
total cost of the slide events is estimated to exceed $3 million. The 66 landslides
occurred during a 3-day period within 12 small watersheds encompassing
3000 ha. The area has experienced logging activity since the 1940s and
contains well over 100 km of active and overgrown roads and trails, many of
which are no longer visible on recent aerial photographs. The task of sorting
out the contribution of the historic logging activities to the landslide
events was described by others as モformidable at best.ヤ The challenges in
commencing such a project included (1) determination of the potential costs
of the assessment work; (2) estimating if any practicable conclusions could
result from such a study, given the vast network of roads and overgrown
trails; and (3) conducting the fi eldwork during the narrow work window
of the spring freshet (the importance of which became very clear shortly
after peak runoff as large streams began to disappear). The fi eldwork used
an observational approach, which required continuous modifi cation as the
work progressed. The fi eldwork began with mapping the natural and road
drainages along road corridors. The fi eld information was plotted daily on
a 1:10 000 scale base map. The plotted information revealed inconsistencies
in stream volume and the location of fl ows. The drainages between road
corridors were then traversed. The モpiecing togetherヤ of the complex series
of drainage diversions eventually resulted in the creation of a site drainage
map, which showed the interaction between natural drainage and road/trail
structures. By overlaying this map with the landslide locations, a link between
many of the 66 landslides and drainage diversions was revealed. It is
judged that drainage diversions were a signifi cant contributing factor in most
of the landslides that occurred in 1990. The creation of this site drainage map
proved to be a valuable tool in evaluating the landslide activity associated
with historic logging practices. The fi eld studies also conclude that the Forest
Practices Code and current forest practices would likely have prevented many
of these slides.
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Shuswap
Sub-watershed if known Shuswap River, Fall Creek
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name
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