The Clinch River above
Clinton, Tennessee (tailwaters of Norris Dam) is stocked with
rainbow trout and
brown trout by the
Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. Before being dammed, the Clinch River was a major producer of freshwater
mussels and
pearls. The rivers of the southern
Appalachians are still notable for their unusually rich mussel biodiversity. The mussels were an important food source for Native Americans. Scots-Irish and later British settlers used mussels as
bait and
hog feed. The freshwater pearl industry thrived throughout the southern Appalachians in the late 19th century and early 20th century. The Clinch River and the Emory River were considered the economic heart of the pearl industry, and Tennessee was one of the top six states in the United States for pearl production. The mussel-based industries began to decline in the early 20th century and were effectively eliminated by the dams built by the TVA in the mid-20th century. The first major Tennessee River dam was
Wilson Dam, built at a site known as
Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The name may have referred to the freshwater mussels of the region (the shoals could also be named for the exertion necessary to move river traffic across them). Norris Dam and Norris Lake on the Clinch River flooded one of the other areas of mussel near Young's Island. Pollution of the river from mining in the region has caused great concern among environmentalists because several rare species inhabit the river. Some
mussels were reintroduced to the
Cleveland, Virginia, area from outside the state in the early 2000s. Pollution of the 20th century had destroyed much of the historic mussels species. In 2008, a
dike rupture at a
coal ash pond led to
a large release of
fly ash from the TVA's
Kingston Fossil Plant depositing 2.6 million pounds of fly ash in the lower section of the river below the confluence of the
Emory River. Although at first the TVA began cleaning the ash out of the river, in 2009 the
EPA took over; they finished removing coal ash in 2010. The release of coal ash in rivers has been shown to result in increased sedimentation and the exposure of trace elements to aquatic organisms. A study done several months after the spill revealed that the river had increased amounts of trace metals such as mercury and arsenic, which are dangerous throughout the food chain. A study done a year after the spill showed that there was a possibility of food web accumulation of
methylmercury, but this had not yet been shown. ==Recreation==