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Abalone Cove SMCA and Point Vicente SMR are two of 36 marine protected areas adopted by the California Fish and Game Commission in December, 2010 during the third phase of the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative. The MLPAI is a collaborative public process to create a statewide network of protected areas along California's coastline.
San Pablo Bay, shown with San Francisco Bay San Pablo Bay and the Carquinez Strait Panorama of San Pablo Bay from Wildcat Mountain near Sears Point in Sonoma County. San Pablo Bay is a tidal estuary that forms the northern extension of the San Francisco Bay in the East Bay and North Bay regions of the San Francisco Bay Area in northern California.
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The river flows under State Route 37 at Green Point and enters northwest San Pablo Bay just north of Petaluma Point. While the river's source lies over 300 ft (100 m) above sea level , it descends to 50 ft (15 m) within about 0.4 mi (600 m).
Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta California’s Green Trade Corridor, is part of the Stockton Deepwater Shipping Channel Map showing the San Joaquin River. Stockton Deepwater Shipping Channel, also called the Baldwin-Stockton Deepwater Shipping Channel or Stockton Deep Water Channel, is a manmade deepwater water channel that runs from Suisun Bay and the Sacramento River - Sacramento Deep ...
Rush Creek is a stream in eastern Marin County, California, United States. It originates on the north edge of Novato, California and flows 1.5 miles (2.4 km) northeasterly through wetlands into Black John Slough and then the Petaluma River. The name is associated with Peter Rush who bought land near Novato in 1862. [2]
The Avila Beach and San Simeon piers were already closed due to existing damage and sustained a new round of nature’s wrath. Large waves hammer the Avila Beach Pier on Thursday, Dec. 29, 2023.
River otter in the Bay were first reported in Redwood Creek at Muir Beach in 1996, [64] and recently in Corte Madera Creek, and in the south Bay on Coyote Creek, [65] as well as in 2010 in San Francisco Bay itself at the Richmond Marina. For the first time in 65 years, Pacific Harbor Porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) returned to the Bay in 2009. [66]