Watershed
A Survey of the French Broad River Basin
A common misconception of a watershed is that
it’s all about
the water. While water does play a large part, the land plays
an even larger role by directing the water to a common point, such
as a river or ocean. Thus Man’s treatment of the land directly
affects the water that runs over it. With this project I have highlighted
this relationship between the land, water, and man, within the microcosm
of the French Broad Watershed.
In the 1950s The French Broad River was one
of the most polluted in the country. A local writer Wilma Dykeman
described the condition of the river as having "white scum that caps the water's blackness
for mile after mile." The river was beset with pollution from
erosion, which was caused by deforestation, pollution from heavy industry,
and the rapid development of the cities within the watershed.
The French Broad Watershed has experienced an
extraordinary rebirth over the past 40 years. The passage of
the Clean Water act in 1972 put heavy limits on the pollution that
industry is allowed to discharge into the waters of the United States.
As a result, the French Broad became a much healthier watershed that
now supports a thriving local ecology and provides a recreational
resource for the local community. Due to weak enforcement of the
Clean Water Act’s mandates and
consistent non-point source pollution, the
French Broad River is now becoming less healthy for the first time
since the passage of the Clean Water Act, which threatens the reversal
of such enormous progress.
This work shows the constant
change that occurs within the watershed of The French Broad River due
to man's presence, as well as natural causes such as floods and erosion.
Beginning at the headwaters of the French Broad and following the river
through Western North Carolina into Tennessee, where it joins with the
Holston River to form the Tennessee River, this project documents the
development and use of the watershed. By documenting the river itself,
the landscape of industry and homes, and the citizens who use the river
and work to protect it, this project creates a portrait of the many varied
aspects that make up a watershed and ultimately emphasizes the importance
of sustainability that is growing in the local community and beyond.