Escalante River: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:R27182818 escalante 0172.jpg|thumb| |
[[Image:R27182818 escalante 0172.jpg|thumb|left|256px|Escalante River gorge upstream from its confluence with Boulder Creek. The Aquarius Plateau is visible on the skyline.]] |
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The '''Escalante River''' is a tributary of the [[Colorado River (U.S.)|Colorado River]]. It is formed by the confluence of North and Birch Creeks near the town of [[Escalante]], Utah and flows into [[Lake Powell]]. Its watershed includes both the high forested slopes of the [[Aquarius Plateau]] and high desert north of Lake Powell |
The '''Escalante River''' is a tributary of the [[Colorado River (U.S.)|Colorado River]]. It is formed by the confluence of North and Birch Creeks near the town of [[Escalante]], Utah and flows into [[Lake Powell]]. Its watershed includes both the high forested slopes of the [[Aquarius Plateau]] and high desert north of Lake Powell. |
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The river was named after [[Silvestre Vélez de Escalante]], a [[Franciscan]] [[missionary]] and the first European explorer of the region. In 1776, Escalante and his Spanish superior [[Francisco Atanasio Domínguez]] left from [[Santa Fe, New Mexico]] on an attempt to reach [[Monterey, California]].<ref>Katieri Treimer, ''Site research report, site no. 916, Southwest Colorado'', Earth Metrics Inc. and SRI International for Contel Systems and the U.S. Air Force 1989</ref> During this journey, usually referred to as the ''[[Dominguez-Escalante Expedition]]'', Escalante and his companions passed by the [[Grand Canyon]] and were the first white men to enter [[Utah]]. |
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For most of the year, the Escalante River is a small [[stream]], easily stepped across or waded. During spring runoff, however, the river can become a raging, muddy torrent ten to one hundred times bigger. In some years, the river can be run using [[kayak|kayaks]] or [[canoe|canoes]] ([[raft|rafts]] are too large), but this requires both good timing — water which is too high or too low can make travel impossible, stranding boaters — and the willingness to portage boats several hundred vertical feet at the end of the trip. |
For most of the year, the Escalante River is a small [[stream]], easily stepped across or waded. During spring runoff, however, the river can become a raging, muddy torrent ten to one hundred times bigger. In some years, the river can be run using [[kayak|kayaks]] or [[canoe|canoes]] ([[raft|rafts]] are too large), but this requires both good timing — water which is too high or too low can make travel impossible, stranding boaters — and the willingness to portage boats several hundred vertical feet at the end of the trip. |
Revision as of 02:53, 25 January 2007
The Escalante River is a tributary of the Colorado River. It is formed by the confluence of North and Birch Creeks near the town of Escalante, Utah and flows into Lake Powell. Its watershed includes both the high forested slopes of the Aquarius Plateau and high desert north of Lake Powell.
The river was named after Silvestre Vélez de Escalante, a Franciscan missionary and the first European explorer of the region. In 1776, Escalante and his Spanish superior Francisco Atanasio Domínguez left from Santa Fe, New Mexico on an attempt to reach Monterey, California.[1] During this journey, usually referred to as the Dominguez-Escalante Expedition, Escalante and his companions passed by the Grand Canyon and were the first white men to enter Utah.
Much of the Escalante River's 90-mile (145km) course is through sinuous sandstone gorges. The river and the rugged canyons which drain into it form a key section of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. This spectacular region is a popular destination for hiking and backpacking.
For most of the year, the Escalante River is a small stream, easily stepped across or waded. During spring runoff, however, the river can become a raging, muddy torrent ten to one hundred times bigger. In some years, the river can be run using kayaks or canoes (rafts are too large), but this requires both good timing — water which is too high or too low can make travel impossible, stranding boaters — and the willingness to portage boats several hundred vertical feet at the end of the trip.
See also
References
- ^ Katieri Treimer, Site research report, site no. 916, Southwest Colorado, Earth Metrics Inc. and SRI International for Contel Systems and the U.S. Air Force 1989