Skip to content
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbon, Waste Water and Run-off
      • Trash
    • Shoreline Erosion | Coastal Armoring + Engineering
    • Dams, Sand Supply, and Habitat Recovery
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitats | Ecosystem Disturbance
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise | Ocean Acidification
    • Coastal Management | Adaptation | Policy
    • Coastal Storms | Extreme Weather
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • Coastal Issues
    • Sand Mining
    • Pollution
      • Plastic
      • Hydrocarbon, Waste Water and Run-off
      • Trash
    • Shoreline Erosion | Coastal Armoring + Engineering
    • Dams, Sand Supply, and Habitat Recovery
    • Beach Nourishment + Maintenance
    • Problematic Coastal Development
    • Habitats | Ecosystem Disturbance
    • Climate Change | Sea Level Rise | Ocean Acidification
    • Coastal Management | Adaptation | Policy
    • Coastal Storms | Extreme Weather
  • Beach Basics
    • Reading a Beach
    • Waves
    • Exploring Beach Sand
    • Tides
    • Cyclones | Typhoons | Hurricanes
    • Sand Dunes
    • Coral Reefs
    • Seashells
  • Coastal Care JR
  • Art + Science
  • Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Beach Science Bibliography
  • Ask an Expert
  • About
  • Contact

Tag: Oregon

These stunning photos show how nature came back after the world’s largest dam removal project – Fast Company

Upper Klamath Lake, June 1, 2024 (by Megan Skinner/USFWS, public domain via U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service).

Four dams and three large reservoirs were removed from the Klamath River in a project that finished last year—and acres of native wildflowers are now in bloom along the river’s edge…

How the Klamath Dams Came Down – Grist Magazine

The Klamath River flowing through the depression left by Copco Lake, drained in spring 2024 prior to the demolition of the Copco Number 1 Dam (by Bob Pagliuco / NOAA Office of Habitat Conservation, Public Domain via Wikimedia).

Last year, tribal nations in Oregon and California won a decades-long fight for the largest dam removal in U.S. history.
This is their story…

  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
  • Home | News
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Archived Menu
  • Contact
Instagram Facebook Twitter

© 2010 – 2024 CoastalCare.org