Kadeya Creek
Kadeya Creek is a tributary of Elwyn Creek, which in turn is a tributary of Mess Creek, part of the Stikine River watershed in northwest part of the province of British Columbia, Canada. It flows generally northwest for roughly to join Elwyn Creek about east of Elwyn Creek's confluence with Mess Creek. Kadeya Creek's watershed covers and its estimated mean annual discharge is. The mouth of Kadeya Creek is located about southeast of Telegraph Creek, about west of Iskut and about southwest of Dease Lake. Kadeya Creek's watershed's land cover is classified as 48.8% shrubland, 18.2% conifer forest, 11.7% barren, 10.9% herbaceous, 8.8% snow/glacier, and small amounts of other cover.
Kadeya Creek is in Mount Edziza Provincial Park which lies within the traditional territory of the Tahltan people.
Geography
Kadeya Creek originates in the middle of the Big Raven Plateau. From its source near Triangle Dome on the western slope of Mount Edziza, Kadeya Creek flows about northwest to the head of a vegetated canyon. It then continues to flow northwest through the canyon for about before flowing north-northwest inside the canyon for an additional to empty into Elwyn Creek.
Geology
Kadeya Creek canyon contains as much as of gently tilted Cretaceous strata of the Sustut Group. This strata, consisting of interbedded siltstone, sandstone, shale and conglomerate, is overlain by basal lavas of the Mount Edziza volcanic complex. Thin seams of coal, carbonizd stems and plant debris occur locally.
History
In 1956, one of Canadian volcanologist Jack Souther's assistants got lost by mistakenly following the wrong tributary of Kadeya Creek. This resulted in them failing to show up at a camp, precipitating a helicopter search for the lost individual. Kadeya Creek was officially named after this incident in 1980; Kadeya means "go after" or "in search of" in the Tahltan language.