Wahweap Creek


Wahweap Creek is a long intermittent stream in southern Utah in the United States, and is a tributary of the Colorado River. It drains a rugged, high elevation, largely roadless mesa and canyon country in the Colorado Plateau region. The creek flows into the Lake Powell reservoir at Wahweap Bay where it gives its name to the Wahweap Marina, a popular access point to the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area.
The Dakota Sandstone Wahweap Hoodoos are located adjacent to the creek near Lake Powell, and are accessible by a hike in the dry streambed. Wahweap Creek also cuts through sections of the fossil-rich Wahweap Formation, which is named after the creek. Caution is essential when traveling in the area as the creek, though usually dry, is prone to large flash floods.
In the 1950s, Wahweap Creek was the site of Glen Canyon City, one of the main Bureau of Reclamation camps for the construction of Glen Canyon Dam which forms Lake Powell. The creek bed was the main source of gravel aggregate for the concrete used in the dam.

Course

Wahweap Creek begins in Garfield County, near Canaan Peak on the Kaiparowits Plateau at elevations above, and flows south into Kane County. It receives Long Canyon and Tommy Smith Creeks from the left, then descends into a canyon where it loses about of elevation in. It continues south as a wide arroyo, receives Coyote Creek from the right and turns southeast past Big Water where U.S. Route 89 skirts the creek, before emptying into Wahweap Bay, an arm of Lake Powell. Lake levels fluctuate between in droughts, to a maximum recorded level of. Before the construction of Glen Canyon Dam, Wahweap Creek flowed for another before joining the Colorado River near Page in Coconino County, Arizona.
The Wahweap Creek watershed comprises about of arid canyon country. The upper part of the creek flows through the Dixie National Forest and the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, and much of the lower section lies in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. As a whole, the watershed is more than 85 percent federally owned. Only of the headwaters of Wahweap Creek are perennial and host significant fish populations.