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Carneros Creek (Napa River)

Carneros Creek
Arroyo De Los Carneros
stream
Carneros Creek Bridge, Old Sonoma Rd., Napa, CA 9-5-2010 11-54-35 AM.JPG
Historic Old Sonoma Road bridge over Carneros Creek in 2010
Country United States
State California
Region Napa County, California
City Napa
Source Mayacamas Mountains
 - elevation 1,500 ft (457 m)
 - coordinates 38°1′58″N 122°24′42″W / 38.03278°N 122.41167°W / 38.03278; -122.41167 
Mouth Napa River
 - elevation 3 ft (1 m)
 - coordinates 38°13′17″N 122°18′43″W / 38.22139°N 122.31194°W / 38.22139; -122.31194Coordinates: 38°13′17″N 122°18′43″W / 38.22139°N 122.31194°W / 38.22139; -122.31194 
Basin 170 sq mi (440 km2)

Carneros Creek is a south by southeastward flowing stream originating in the southernmost Mayacamas Mountains, in Napa County, California. It is the southernmost tributary to the Napa River, entering 2.5 miles (4.0 km) north of San Pablo Bay and 5 miles (8.0 km) south of the town of Napa.

A Mexican land grant named Los Carneros, which is Spanish for "sheep", dates to 1836 (Rancho Rincon de los Carneros) in what is now Napa County. Rancho Rincon de los Carneros, extending northeast from Carneros Creek to the Napa River, was granted to Nicolas Higuera around this time. Higuera also received Rancho Entre Napa, contiguous to the north along the creek. Carneros Creek forms the northeast border of the 1841 Mexican land grant Rancho Huichica which includes most of the Carneros region and Huichica Creek which is west of and parallel to Carneros Creek. Rancho Huichica was granted to Jacob P. Leese the first American pioneer to build a house in San Francisco. In the next year, Antonio Ortega, the Administrator of Mission San Francisco Solano, was granted a large rancho from Napa to Yountville. This area, which extended to Carneros Creek, above Higuera’s grant, was later granted to Salvador Vallejo.

The Carneros Creek official mainstem is 9.8 miles (15.8 km) long. This third order stream has a rectangular drainage basin area of 8.9 square miles (23 km2). The highest elevation in the watershed is 1,660 feet (510 m) above mean sea level, dropping to sea level at its confluence with the Napa River. The lowest 1,640 feet (500 m) of the creek is confined within flood levees.

Carneros Creek is an anadromous Steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) stream. Because these trout spend two years in freshwater before returning to the sea, only the perennial middle reach of the creek hosts trout year-round (between Old Sonoma Road and extending upstream about 4.2 miles (6.8 km) where the channel goes dry in summer and fall).


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Wikipedia

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