Lytle Creek (California)


Lytle Creek, California, is an approximately stream in southwestern San Bernardino County near the city of San Bernardino. It is a tributary of Warm Creek, a tributary of the Santa Ana River. The Mormon settlers of San Bernardino named the stream "Lytle Creek" after their leader, Captain Andrew Lytle.

Lytle Creek Watershed

Lytle Creek flows through the eastern San Gabriel Mountains and has three forks, the North, Middle and South forks. The source of the creek is at the confluence of the North Fork and Middle Fork Lytle Creek, just west of the town of Lytle Creek, California. South Fork Lytle Creek joins Lytle Creek soon afterward on the right. As the creek
emerges from the mountains, about where Glen Helen Parkway crosses the creek, the Lytle Creek Wash begins. At the lower end of the wash, there is the old Lower Lytle Creek channel, that has been artificially canalized which splits off to the east, while an additional artificial diversion channel, the smaller Lytle Creek Channel, continues southeastward to rejoin the waters of Lytle Creek in the reach of Warm Creek
near its mouth at Knoll Park. The lower creek has its conjunction with the artificial channel of Warm Creek, 1 mile before Warm Creek joins the Santa Ana River. Below this conjunction, the Lytle Creek Channel merges with the Warm Creek channel at Knoll Park just before it joins the river.
Several moderate-to-large-sized cities are built on the ancient alluvial fan sediments left behind by Lytle Creek.
has a 600-kW hydroelectric plant on the stream at Miller Narrows at an elevation of 2795 feet. It is a run-of-the-river plant. A diversion dam sends the water through a turbine, which is returned to the streambed further downstream.