FRIENDS OF KENNEBEC SALMON STOPS FISH KILL
AT COBBOSSEECONTEE STREAM,
GARDINER, MAINE -- OCTOBER 2002
Read the Enforcement Order from
the Maine Department of Environmental Protection.

These are among thousands of baby alewives killed on the afternoon of
Saturday, October 5, 2002 at the American Tissue Dam, owned by Consolidated
Hydro-Electric, on Cobbosseecontee Stream in Gardiner, Maine.

These baby alewives were killed when they tried to migrate downstream
over the dam spillway (above) and fell 25 feet onto the flat concrete slab
at the base of the dam with less than 1/2 inch of water to cushion their
heads and bodies from the concrete. The rocks were placed at the base of
the water plume by Friends of the Kennebec Salmon on 5 October 2002 in an
attempt to create a small plunge pool to cushion the alewives from striking
bare concrete.
The impact of the fall on the concrete slab killed many fish instantly,
while others died a few minutes later from massive head injuries. The impact
was so severe that the fish were bouncing four to seven feet in the air
upon hitting the concrete slab at the base of the dam spillway. They didn't
have a chance nor were they given one. And so they died by the thousands,
some swiftly, some slowly and painfully.

The force of the impact on the concrete slab was so severe that it caused
this baby alewife's eyes to pop completely out of its head. The blood beneath
the scales on dead fish show that the impact caused massive bleeding in
their skulls and bodies. Many fish were observed to have broken backs.
These alewives are about 3-4 inches long and were migrating to the Atlantic
Ocean before they were killed by the American Tissue Dam.
All of the above fish were found within 10 feet of the base of the American
Tissue Dam spillway, where they died at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2002.
The stream below the dam spillway was littered with thousands of dead
alewives in the same or worse condition as those above.