Science

Earth from space: Massive landslide dams Canadian river, trapping endangered fish on the wrong side

QUICK FACTS

Where is it? The Chilcotin River, British Columbia [51.85860344, -122.82148613]

What’s in the photo? Debris from a landslide blocking the flow of the river

Which satellite took the photo? Landsat 9

When was it taken? Aug. 1, 2024

Striking new satellite imagery shows a Canadian river quickly swelling in size after a massive landslide completely dammed the waterway. The obstruction may have also doomed an endangered salmon population by preventing the individuals that survived the sudden damming from reaching their spawning grounds upriver.

The massive landslide occurred late on July 30 near Farwell Canyon on the southern bank of the Chilcotin River — a 150-mile-long (240 kilometers) tributary of the Fraser River. The landslide took place around 14 miles (22 km) upstream from where the Chilcotin joins the Fraser, dumping roughly 640 million cubic feet (18 million cubic meters) of earth and rock across the waterway and completely blocking its flow, according to an emergency statement from the British Columbia government.


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