Sunday, August 9, 2009

Ice Slough

The Ice Slough is actually a small tributary which drains into the Sweetwater. A variety of marsh grasses and related tufted marsh plants, known as sedges, form a patchwork of surface plant life. Water flowing underneath this peat-like vegetation freezes solid in the winter and remains frozen during the spring and early summer as a result of this insulating peat.

In the middle of the hot, dusty trek, emigrants found ice an exceptional treat and this area became a popular camping site. While here, many emigrants dug up large blocks of ice and stored it in their water barrels to provide cold water for the long difficult stretches ahead. J. Goldsborough Bruff noted in 1849 that "The surface is dug up all around by travelers – as much from curiosity as to obtain so desirable a luxury in a march so dry and thirsty…." Today, irrigation diversions have left the slough almost dry and very little ice now forms.

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