Jón Bjarnason Academy - 01.05.1936, Síða 21

Jón Bjarnason Academy - 01.05.1936, Síða 21
 Lake Winnipeg—The Muddy Water By H. C. KNOX, B.A. Teacher of Chemistry, Daniel McIntyre School, Winnipeg. We are all apt to think that which lies far away is interest- ing and that which lies at our door is commonplace. When we think of the great waters of the world, we never consider those of Manitoba. The Great Lakes of Canada are those of the St. Lawrence chain. It just never occurs to us that Lake Win- nipeg has about two thousand more square miles than Lake Ontario, and that it has its own interest in character and history as well as the better advertised waters to the East. So let us look at our lake to see what it is really like, and what has been its story. It is like a line dividing East from West. It belongs to neither, for on one side is the level prairie stretching to the Rockies while on the other is the Canadian Shield, reaching to the Atlantic. The streams flowing in from the East are dark and clear, while those from the West and South are the muddy prairie rivers. All of these drain an immense area. It stretches on the West to the crests of the Rockies, on the East nearly to Lake Superior while to the south its head waters mingle with those of the Mississippi five hundred miles away. Slowly these southern and western rivers are filling up the lake and some geologic ages hence this pale descendant of Lake Agassiz, which covered 110,000 square miles to its nine thousand will be a duck haunted marsh. It has two main differences from the Eastern lakes. It has nowhere a greater depth than one hundred feet while the average is not much more than ten feet. Lake Superior is nearly a thousand feet deep. The other great difference is the muddiness of its waters. It is those prairie streams that make it dirty, although its shallowness also helps, the bottoms being stirred by every storm. That lesser depth does not mean that it is a safer lake than the Eastern ones, but rather that it is the more to be feared. Deep waters stir slowly with the storm and the waves move in long rollers. The Winnipeg shallows are quickly roused and the waves go in short sharp breakers which wash over a small boat. The history of the lake has been one of disaster ever since the days of the birch bark. • i That shallow water, however, means that it warms up much more quickly than deeper lakes. Superior with its thousand feet is always cold, hut give Winnipeg a month of warm weather

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