<h2><SPAN name="page_115">THE STORY OF GREAT SALT LAKE</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
The most interesting geographical feature of Utah is the Great
Salt Lake. Few tourists now cross the continent without visiting
the lake and taking a bath in its briny waters. This strange body
of water has, however, been slowly growing smaller for some years,
and probably will in time disappear. A study of the history of the
lake may throw some light upon the important question of its possible
disappearance, and it will certainly bring out many interesting
facts.</p>
<p class="indent">
We do not know with certainty who was the first white man to look
upon this inland sea, although it is supposed to have been James
Bridger, a noted trapper, who in 1825 followed Bear River down to
its mouth. He tasted the water and found it salt, a fact which
encouraged him in the belief that he had found an arm of the Pacific
Ocean.</p>
<p class="indent">
More than two hundred years ago there were vague ideas about a
salt lake situated somewhere beyond the Rocky Mountains. In 1689
Baron Lahontan published an account of his travels from Mackinac
to the Mississippi River and the region beyond. He states that he
ascended a westerly branch of the river for six weeks, until the
season became too late for farther progress. He reports meeting
savages who said that one hundred and fifty leagues beyond there
was a salt lake, "three hundred leagues in circumference—its
mouth stretching a great way to the southward."</p>
<p class="indent">
This imaginative story aroused interest in the West. In a book
published in 1772, devoted to a description of the province La
Louisiane, the possibility of water communication with the South
Sea is discussed as follows: "It will be of great convenience to
this country, if ever it becomes settled, that there is an easy
communication therewith, and the South Sea, which lies between
America and China, and that two ways: by the north branch of the
great Yellow River, by the natives called the river of the 'Massorites'
(Missouri), which hath a course of five hundred miles, navigable
to its head, or springs, and which proceeds from a ridge of hills
somewhat north of New Mexico, passable by horse, foot, or wagon,
in less than half a day. On the other side are rivers which run
into a great lake that empties itself by another navigable river
into the South Sea. The same may be said of the Meschaouay, up
which our people have been, but not so far as the Baron Lahontan,
who passed on it above three hundred miles almost due west, and
declares it comes from the same ridge of hills above mentioned,
and that divers rivers from the other side soon make a large river,
which enters into a vast lake, on which inhabit two or three great
nations, much more populous and civilized than other Indians; and
out of that lake a great river disembogues into the South Sea."</p>
<p class="indent">
In 1776 Father Escalante travelled from Santa Fé far to the
north and west. He met Indians who told him of a lake the waters
of which produced a burning sensation when placed upon the skin.
This was probably Great Salt Lake, but it is not thought that he
himself ever saw it. The Escalante Desert, in southern Utah, once
covered by the waters of the lake, is named after this explorer.</p>
<p class="indent">
Nothing more seems to have been learned of the lake after its discovery
by Bridger until in 1833 Bonneville, a daring leader among the
trappers, organized a party for its exploration. Washington Irving,
in his history of Captain Bonneville, says of the party, "A desert
surrounded them and stretched to the southwest as far as the eye
could reach, rivalling the deserts of Asia and Africa in sterility.
There was neither tree, nor herbage, nor spring, nor pool, nor
running stream, nothing but parched wastes of sand, where horse
and rider were in danger of perishing."</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 517px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig052.jpg" width-obs="517" height-obs="357" alt="Fig. 52">
FIG. 52.—SCENE ON GREAT SALT LAKE</div>
<p class="indent">
although decreasing in area so rapidly, Great Salt Lake is still
the largest body of water in the western part of the United States,
and the largest salt lake within its boundaries. It has a length
of seventy miles and a maximum width of nearly fifty miles.</p>
<p class="indent">
Desolate, indeed, must have appeared the surroundings of the lake,
with its salt-incrusted borders, as the Mormon emigrants gained the
summit of the Wasatch Range and looked out over the vast expanse
to the west. But as the slopes at the foot of the mountains seemed
capable of producing food for their support, they stopped and made
their homes there. Now in this same region, after half a century, one
can ride for many miles through as beautiful and highly cultivated
a country as the sun ever looked down upon. In the early days the
barren plains were broken only by mountains almost as barren, which
rose from them like the islands from the surface of the Great Salt
Lake. The only pleasing prospect was toward the east, where stood
the steep and rugged Wasatch Range, with its snow-capped peaks.
From its deep cañons issued large streams of pure, cold
water, which flowed undisturbed across the brush-covered slopes,
then unbroken by irrigating ditches, and at last were lost in the
salt lake.</p>
<p class="indent">
One might think that streams of water apparently so pure would
at last freshen the lake, but in reality they are carrying along
invisible particles of mineral matter which add to its saltness
day by day. The dry air steals away the water from the lake as
fast as it runs in, but cannot take the minerals which it holds
in solution.</p>
<p class="indent">
Great Salt Lake is still considered very large, but at one time
it was ten times its present size, while still longer ago there
was no lake at all. Without a basin there can be no lake, and at
that far-away time, as we have already learned, the Great Basin
did not exist, and the streams, if there were any, ran away to
the ocean without hindrance.</p>
<p class="indent">
When the Great Basin was formed by a breaking and bending of the
crust of the earth, many a stream lost its connection with the
ocean and went to work filling up the smaller basins, thus giving
rise to the lakes which have already been described. The largest of
these bodies of water, and in some respects the most interesting,
is Great Salt Lake.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig053.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="358" alt="Fig. 53">
FIG. 53.—OLD SHORE LINE OF LAKE BONNEVILLE
<p class="imgnote">Foot of the Wasatch Range</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
This lake, lying close to the lofty Wasatch Range, received so
much water from numerous streams during the Glacial period that
it slowly spread over thousands of square miles, overrunning the
desert valleys and making islands of the scattered mountain ranges.
It extended from north to south across Utah, into southern Idaho
and almost to the Arizona line, until this body of water, which
arose from so small beginnings, had become a veritable inland sea,
three hundred miles long, one hundred miles wide, and one thousand
feet deep.</p>
<p class="indent">
By the time the lake had covered an area of twenty thousand square
miles the lowest point in the rim of the basin was reached and the
overflow began. No map will tell you where the outlet was, for
no river exists there now. If you could explore the shore lines
of this ancient lake, which has been called Bonneville after the
noted trapper, you would find two low spots in the mountains which
hem the waters in, one upon the south, facing the Colorado River,
the other on the north toward the Snake River. The one on the north
happened to be a little lower, so that the break occurred there.
First as a little, trickling stream, then as a mighty, surging
river, the water poured northward down the valley of a small stream,
widening and deepening it until, passing the spot where now the
town of Pocatello stands, it joined the Snake River.</p>
<p class="indent">
This old outlet is now known as Red Rock Pass, and it forms an
easy route for the Oregon Short Line from Salt Lake City to the
plains of southern Idaho. The old river-bed is marked by marshes
and fertile farms.</p>
<p class="indent">
With an outlet established, Lake Bonneville could rise no higher,
and its waves began the formation of a well-defined terrace or
beach, just as waves are sure to do along every shore. The level
of the water could not remain permanently at the same height, for
the rocks at the outlet were being worn away by the large volume
of water which flowed over them. In the course of years the level
of the lake was lowered four hundred feet. The sinking was not
uniform, but took place by stages, while at each period of rest
the waves made a new beach line. The lake during all this time
must have been a beautiful sheet of fresh water filled with fish.
Its shores, also, must have been much richer in vegetation than
they are now.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig054.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="385" alt="Fig. 54">
FIG. 54.—RED ROCK PASS, SOUTHERN IDAHO
<p class="imgnote">Outlet of Lake Bonneville</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
The water remained for a long time at the level of four hundred
feet below its highest stage. This fact is evident from the width
of the wave-cut terrace, which is the most prominent of all those
that mark the old levels along the sides of the mountains. Finally,
for some reason the climate began to change, the streams supplied
less water to the lake, and the evaporation from its surface became
greater because the air was drier. As a result the lake was lowered
to such an extent that it lost its outlet. The mighty river flowing
down through Red Rock Cañon grew smaller and at last dried
up altogether.</p>
<p class="indent">
In this manner the lake was again cut off from the ocean, as it
had been during its earlier history. The waters still continued
to recede, but not at a uniform rate. During periods of greater
rain its level remained stationary, so that the waves added new
terraces to those already formed.</p>
<p class="indent">
As the lake had no outlet and was decreasing in volume, the water
became salty, for the minerals brought by the streams could no
longer be carried away. The fish either died or passed up into the
purer waters of the inflowing streams.</p>
<p class="indent">
The water of the present lake is so salt that in every four quarts
there is one quart of salt, and the preparation of this commodity by
a process of evaporating the water in ponds has become an important
industry. The water is the strongest kind of brine and it is impossible
for a bather to sink in it. One floats about upon it almost as lightly
as wood does upon ordinary water. After bathing it is necessary to
wash in fresh water to remove the salt from the body.</p>
<p class="indent">
The dry bed of the former Lake Bonneville stretches far to the
south and west of the present lake, and forms one of the most barren
and arid regions in the United States. It is sometimes called the
Great American Desert.</p>
<p class="indent">
Why is the lake receding now? Some people think that the climate is
growing still more arid, and that the lake will eventually disappear.
Others think that its shrinkage is the result of irrigation, for a
large part of the water from the streams which supply it is now
taken out and turned upon the land. There is still another reason
which may account for the low water. The lake is known to rise
and fall during a series of wet and dry years. When first mapped,
in the middle of the last century, it was about as low as it is
now. Then it gradually rose for a number of years and lately has
again been falling.</p>
<p class="indent">
The story of Great Salt Lake has been much more complicated than
the statement given above, but this is sufficient for our purpose.</p>
<p class="indent">
Irrigation has made a garden spot of a large part of the old bed
of Lake Bonneville, but much of the beauty and attractiveness of
this region would be lost if the present lake should give place
to a bed of glistening salt. Let us hope that it will remain as
it is.</p>
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