Bear River (Great Salt Lake) Explained

Bear River
Native Name:[1]
Map:Bearrivermap.png
Map Size:300
Pushpin Map Size:300
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Utah, Idaho, Wyoming
Subdivision Type3:County
Length:350miles
Discharge1 Location:Corinne, Utah, 4miles from the mouth[2]
Discharge1 Min:25cuft/s
Discharge1 Avg:2410cuft/s
Discharge1 Max:10400cuft/s
Source1:Confluence of Hayden Fork and Stillwater Fork
Source1 Location:Uinta Mountains, Summit County, Utah
Source1 Coordinates:40.8672°N -110.8358°W
Source1 Elevation:8510feet
Mouth Location:Great Salt Lake, Box Elder County, Utah
Mouth Coordinates:41.4583°N -112.2903°W
Mouth Elevation:4211feet
Basin Size:7026sqmi[3]

The Bear River is the largest tributary of the Great Salt Lake, draining a mountainous area and farming valleys northeast of the lake and southeast of the Snake River Plain. It flows through northeastern Utah, southwestern Wyoming, southeastern Idaho, and back into northern Utah, in the United States. Approximately long[4] [5] it is the longest river in North America that does not ultimately reach the sea.[6]

History

Late Pleistocene

The Bear River was a tributary of the Snake River until 140,000 years ago when a volcanic eruption north of Soda Springs, Idaho, diverted it into what was then Lake Bonneville.[7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [6]

Recent history

The river valley was inhabited by the Shoshone people. Fur trappers from the Hudson's Bay Company began to penetrate the area, exploring south from the Snake River as early as 1812. John C. Frémont explored the area in 1843, and the Mormon Trail crossed the Bear River south of Evanston.

The California and Oregon Trails followed the Bear River north out of Wyoming to Fort Hall in Idaho. Some of the travelers on the trails chose to stay, populating the Bear River Valleys of Idaho and Utah. The Cache Valley was an early destination for Mormon pioneers in the late 1840s.[14]

On January 29, 1863, troops of the United States Army attacked a Shoshone winter village in the Cache Valley, slaughtering most of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone. The incident has come to be known as the Bear River massacre.

The Bear River was surveyed through the Cache Divide for diversion and irrigation in 1868. After the First transcontinental railroad was completed in 1869, the Central Pacific was given over a third of the land in the Bear River Valley through land grants. Alexander Toponce purchased 52000acres of this land in 1883 for $65,000. He and John W. Kerr created the Corinne Mill, Canal and Stock Company and ultimately owned 90000acres of land in the area. John R. Bothwell purchased much of this land in 1888. Bothwell created the Jarvis-Conklin Mortgage and Trust Company with Samuel M. Jarvis and Roland R. Conklin, with $2 million on mortgage bonds. The majority of these bonds were bought by Quaker societies in Scotland, England, and Ireland. This money was used to create a diversion dam and irrigation canals, employing 7000 men in late 1889. The company also bought the Ogden City Water Works.

The company went bankrupt by 1893, and bondholders reorganized into the Bear River Irrigation and Ogden Water Works Company with W. H. Rowe as president. Part of the canal project was then purchased by the Bear River Land Company, and part of the irrigation project by the Bear River Irrigation Company.

After the success of the Utah Sugar Company growing operations and factory in Lehi, farmers in the Bear River Valley began to experiment with growing sugar beets. This was successful, so Thomas R. Cutler, George Austin, and Mosiah Evans, executives at the Utah Sugar Company, purchased a portion of the Bear River Irrigation Company and organized the Bear River Land, Orchard and Sugar Beet Company in 1900. Cutler authorized the purchase of the entire Bear River Irrigation Company, plus an option on 31200acres of land from the Bear River Land Company in 1901. This was financed by issuing and selling $500,000 in new stock in the Utah Sugar Company. Shortly, 50000acres were being irrigated and farmed.

Utah Sugar expanded the east canal between 1902 and 1905, installed a hydroelectric plant on the Bear River, and installed a 2700-horsepower water pump on the west canal. They also negotiated with the Oregon Short Line to construct a railroad from Corinne 16miles north to Garland, which was completed in 1903. Utah Sugar built a sugar beet processing factory in 1903, also using the newly constructed rail line to transport the necessary machinery.

In 1911 a dam was constructed at Wardboro, Idaho, that diverted the majority of the flow of the Bear River into Bear Lake, via Mud Lake to act as a reservoir for the irrigation district. Water rejoins the river via an outlet canal a short distance downstream from the diversion[15]

Utah Sugar's water rights, dams, hydroelectric plant, and transmission lines were purchased by Utah Power & Light, now known as Rocky Mountain Power, in December 1912 for $1.75 million. Utah Sugar purchased the canals on both sides of the Bear River in 1920 and controlled them at least through the 1960s.

Course

Since the river was diverted 140,000 years ago, the course of the river essentially makes a large inverted U around the north end of the Wasatch Range. It rises in northeastern Utah in several short forks on the north side of the high Uinta Mountains in southern Summit County. The main stem Bear River begins at the confluence of two tributaries, Hayden Fork and Stillwater Fork. The Hayden Fork originates north of Hayden Pass, just west of Hayden Peak. The Stillwater Fork originates in the Middle Basin, a plateau with an elevation of about 10000feet and surrounded by high peaks of Mount Agassiz, Hayden Peak, and Spread Eagle Peak. One of the Stillwater Fork's tributaries is called Main Fork, which originates in another high–altitude basin called Hell Hole.[16]

From its source, the Bear River flows north, cutting across the southwest corner of Wyoming, passing through Evanston then weaving along the Utah-Wyoming state line as it flows north. It turns northwest into Bear Lake County, Idaho, and flows through the Bear Lake Valley in Idaho. There, the majority of the river flow is diverted into Bear Lake, which straddles the Idaho-Utah border, before rejoining the main river course near Montpelier via the Bear Lake Outlet Canal a short distance downstream from the diversion. At Soda Springs, near the north end of the Wasatch Range, the Bear River turns abruptly south, flowing past Preston in the broad Cache Valley that extends north from Logan, Utah. It re-enters northern Utah, meandering south past Cornish and Newton. It is impounded to form the Cutler Reservoir, where it receives the Little Bear River from the south. From the west end of Cutler Reservoir, it flows south through the Bear River Valley of Utah past Bear River City. It receives the Malad River from the north just before emptying into the mud flats of a broad bay on the east side of the Great Salt Lake; approximately 10miles southwest of Brigham City.

Uses and protected areas

The river is used extensively for irrigation in the farming valleys through which it flows in its lower reaches in Idaho and northern Utah.

The lower 10miles of the river near its delta on the Great Salt Lake are protected as part of Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Bear River Massacre: A Shoshone History . Darren Parry . 2019 . Common Consent Press . 978-1948218207.
  2. Web site: USGS Gage #10126000 on the Bear River near Corinne, Utah. National Water Information System . U.S. Geological Survey. 2010-06-13.
  3. Web site: USGS Gage #10126000 on the Bear River near Corinne, Utah (Average Annual Discharge). National Water Information System . U.S. Geological Survey. 1950–2021. 2010-06-13.
  4. Hopkins, Daniel J., editor (1997). Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary. (Third Edition). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, Inc. Publishers. p.123.
  5. Bridgwater, William & Kurtz, Seymour. editors. The Columbia Encyclopedia. (Third Edition). New York: Columbia University Press, 1963. p. 183.
  6. Web site: Davis . Jim . Glad You Asked: Why Does A River Run Through It? – Utah Geological Survey . https://web.archive.org/web/20190209043301/https://geology.utah.gov/map-pub/survey-notes/glad-you-asked/why-does-a-river-run-through-it/ . 2019-02-09.
  7. Bright, R.C., 1967, Tebiwa v. 10
  8. Link, P.K.; Kaufman, D.S.; Thackray, G.D., 1999, Field guide to Pleistocene Lakes Thatcher and Bonneville and the Bonneville Flood, southeastern Idaho, in Hughes, S.S.; Thackray, G.D. (editors), Guidebook to the Geology of Eastern Idaho, Idaho Museum of Natural History, p. 251-266
  9. Bright, R.C., 1963, Pleistocene Lakes Thatcher and Bonneville, southeastern Idaho, PhD dissertation, University of Minnesota, 292 pgs.
  10. Bright, R.C.; Rubin, M., 1965, Part H: Lake Bonneville, in Schultz, C.B.; Smith, H.T.U. (editors), INQUA 7th Congress, Guidebook for Field Conference E: Northern and Middle Rocky Mountains, p. 104-112
  11. Bright, R.C., 1960, Geology of the Cleveland area, southeastern Idaho, MS Thesis, University of Utah, 262 pgs.
  12. Bouchard D.P.; Kaufman D.S.; Hochberg, A.; Quade J., 1998, Quaternary history of the Thatcher Basin, Idaho, reconstructed from the 87Sr/86Sr and amino acid composition of lacustrine fossils: Implications for the diversion of the Bear River into the Bonneville Basin, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 141, p. 95-114
  13. Hochberg, A., 1996, Aminostratigraphy of Thatcher Basin, SE Idaho: Reassessment of Pleistocene lakes, MS thesis, Utah State University, 112 pgs.
  14. Book: Arrington, Leonard J.. Beet sugar in the West; a history of the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, 1891–1966. University of Washington Press. 1966. 234150.
  15. Web site: Bear River watershed information system – Bear Lake . 2021-08-12 . 2022-06-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220624223346/https://bearriverinfo.org/watershed-description/bear-lake/index . dead .
  16. Web site: USGS topographic maps . ACME Mapper . 1 November 2010.