Tice Creek begins as a two small and intermittent streams emitting from a number of springs that surface in the hills above the senior-living community at Rossmoor, Walnut Creek, California.
As a result of suburban development, many of the creek's tributaries are confined to concrete channels or culverts, which seek to reduce the impact of flooding.[1] Tice Creek runs northward through the Rossmoor golf course where its channel has been heavily modified and in some places runs over concrete.[2] After exiting Rossmoor, Tice Creek makes an abrupt turn to the east, where it joins with Las Trampas Creek shortly above its confluence with San Ramon Creek.
The Tice Valley is situated in between the communities of Burton Valley and Walnut Creek, California. The gated senior community of Rossmoor, Walnut Creek, California occupies the valley floor. Virtually the entirety of the flat land as well as a sizeable portion of the hillsides in the Tice Creek watershed have been developed for suburban or recreational use.
The Tice Creek watershed is defined by a broad north-south trending valley called the Tice Valley. The transform faulting characteristic of much of the West Coast has divided the land up into a series of small valleys that generally trend north to south.[4] It is speculated that the Tice Valley's present wide form is the result of rifting.[4]
Like many streams on the California coast, Tice Creek's course is thought to roughly follow a fault system, particularly the Calaveras Fault and its extensions.[5]
Tice Creek has been significantly degraded ecologically since historic times.[1] The introduction of impermeable surfaces as well as residential infrastructure relating to the community of Rossmoor, Walnut Creek, California has heavily altered the character of the stream.
Invasive and exotic species of plants have replaced native Californian vegetation in much of their habitat along the creek. Tice Creek retains little riparian vegetation along its course through the Rossmoor golf course.
The well-watered grasses and landscaping of the Rossmoor Golf Course attract multiple species of local wildlife, like black-tailed deer, turkey and ducks and coyote which are seen frequently. The habitats in and around the creek support a population of songbirds as well as raptors. Amphibians of various types inhabit the creek.
Tice Creek historically hosted a run of Steelhead trout and possibly salmon.[6] Native species like Steelhead trout and salmon have been extirpated from Tice Creek as a result of pollution, urban development and the installation of multiple channel modifications which inhibit their access to spawning areas.[6][1]
History
A village of around 80 SaclanBay Miwok people lived along Tice Creek at the mouth of the Tice Valley.[7][8] The community in the valley was thought to have been there from around 1500 AD to the Spanish invasion of California in the 1770s.[7][9] Though Tice Creek and its tributaries did not always carry water, the natives erected their village on a small year-round spring adjacent to the creek's banks.
Tice Creek meandered through a wide and open Tice valley, dotted with groves of oak trees from which the natives derived their principle food source: acorns. The Saclan in the Tice Creek valley had access to a wide range of resources and dwelled in the center of one of the most densely populated places in pre-columbian North America.[10] When compared to other native groups in the Americas, the Saclan lived prosperous lives dictated by strict spiritual and social guidelines.[10]
During the construction of Rossmoor, Walnut Creek, California in the 1960s, a large excavation of the Saclan village was carried out by the University of California, Berkeley under the supervision of Dr. David Frederickson.[7] Burials, tools, jewelry and evidence of dwellings were uncovered, showing continued occupation of the site for hundreds of years.
Tice Creek is unique among many urbanized creeks in California in that parts of its native Californian past are still visible and accessible. What remains of the Saclan's village after heavy development, their mortar rocks and spring, sit behind a bus stop at the entrance to Rossmoor, Walnut Creek, California marked by a small sign describing the site.
^ abMilliken, Randall (1995). A Time of Little Choice: The Disintegration of Tribal Culture in the San Francisco Bay Area 1769-1806. Ballena Press. ISBN978-0879191313.