Living, working, and playing on an active volcano means learning new words pretty often. One that I learned early on was aggradation; the rate at which a river deposits material. With five good size rivers (and numerous creeks) in the park, Mount Rainier National Park has a lot of rock filling up the glacier-fed riverbeds. In some rivers, the amount of rock coming into the riverbed could equal the amount moving out. Not so at Mount Rainier. In the park, the riverbeds have been piling up about 3 feet of rock per decade (data from 1997-2010). It doesn’t sound like a lot until that there are places like Longmire, Carbon River entrance, and the White River entrance that are lower than the river beside them. Longmire sits 29 feet below the Nisqually River. These lower elevations can be very enticing places for rivers to make new riverbeds.
As one of the year-round accessible park places the Carbon River entrance, in the park’s northwest corner, can be popular in its own quiet way. Its open for your hiking, biking, nature appreciation, and camping needs almost all the time. The big challenge here, and at other park locations, is that the riverbed is so full of rock that now the Carbon River likes to run outside the riverbed, into the forest and quite often onto the Carbon River Road trail. How do we keep access open to these areas when a big, strong river runs over the roads and trails? Definitely a question that park visitors and staff will have to wrestle with now and in the future. ~ams
NPS/Spillane Photo (top) The Carbon River near the park entrance. October, 2012. NPS Photo (middle) Waterfall at washout of Carbon River Road. November, 2006. NPS/K. Loving (bottom) A channel of the Carbon River flowing through the forest. July, 2018.