Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Mariposa Creek

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- elevation
  
3,092 ft (942 m)

- elevation
  
0 ft (0 m)

- location
  
Duck Slough

Country
  
United States of America

- left
  
Stockton Creek, Spring Creek, Brushy Canyon Creek, Ganns Creek

- right
  
Agua Fria Creek, China Gulch, Bull Run Creek

- location
  
Western Sierra Nevada foothills

Similar
  
California State Mining an, Mark West Creek, Butte Creek, Isabella Dam, Pine Flat Dam

Mariposa Creek, originally called the Mariposa River, is a creek that has its source in Mariposa near the town of Mariposa, California, United States that flows through that town southwest through the Sierra foothills, into and across the San Joaquin Valley in Merced County, into the sloughs of the San Joaquin River south of Merced, California.

Contents

Map of Mariposa Creek, California, USA

HistoryEdit

Mariposa Creek, was named by the Spanish explorer Gabriel Moraga on September 27, 1806, when they discovered a great cluster of butterflies ("mariposas" in Spanish and Portuguese): "We named this place Mariposas [butterflies] because these abounded, especially at night and during the morning. These butterflies became quite a nuisance. Their eagerness to escape the sun's rays was so pronounced that they pursued us closely everywhere and one of them got inside the ear of one of the privates, causing him great discomfort and us much trouble in extracting it." Each year, the first weekend in May, residents mark the annual arrival of migrating monarch butterflies with a "Butterfly Days" festival and parade.

During the California Gold Rush, the Mariposa River was a rich gold-bearing creek and the site of several mining camps, including Logtown, Mariposa and Mariposita.

WatershedEdit

Mariposa County contains three major drainage basins: the Merced River, Chowchilla River/Fresno River, and a localized cluster of streams of the east valley known as the Lower Mariposa group of streams. These three basins and their component watersheds are part of the much larger San Joaquin River system that drains the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada. At the lower end of the watershed, Mariposa Creek is dammed by the Mariposa Creek Dam (88 feet (27 m) high). The Mariposa Public Utilities District (MPUD) operates the Stockton Creek Dam (95 feet (29 m) tall) on Stockton Creek, a tributary of Mariposa Creek.

References

Mariposa Creek Wikipedia