slgwv

slgwv club

Posted: 27 Apr 2017


Taken: 18 Apr 2017

3 favorites     6 comments    542 visits

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Honey Lake
Susan River
Hartson Slough


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Hartson Slough

Hartson Slough
As a follow-up to a discussion elsewhere: "slough" (locally pronounced "sloo") is widely used in the western US for a low, typically elongate shallow pond, which may even be just mud (left inset). Here the "slough" is an abandoned distributary channel of the Susan River on its way to its sump in Honey Lake. With the heavy run-off this year, the slough is actually carrying some overflow from the Susan, as can be seen by the current ripples around the weeds in the right inset.
The Susan is another landlocked river, draining eastward into the Honey Lake Basin which is within the Great Basin. It was named for Susan Roop, daughter of Isaac Roop, first territorial governor of Nevada. At that time, before any formal surveys, this area was thought to lie in Nevada.

Smiley Derleth, , Pam J have particularly liked this photo


6 comments - The latest ones
 Pam J
Pam J club
"Slough" in old English is also aname for a pond.

Admired in ~ I ♥ Nature
7 years ago. Edited 7 years ago.
slgwv club has replied to Pam J club
Per the online etymology dictionary, it meant "low, muddy place," and there are some cognates in continental Germanic languages. It's interesting that it apparently survives as an active name for a geographic feature only locally in the US.
6 years ago.
 slgwv
slgwv club
Thanks, everyone!
6 years ago.
 Don Barrett (aka DBs travels)
Don Barrett (aka DBs… club
In Florida we used to also use 'slough' to refer to temporary, water-filled, depressions along the beach that were separated from the ocean by very low sandbars. Such sloughs usually washed away with changing tides. It was somewhat confusing, since shallow dead-end branches off of creeks in marshes were also referred to as sloughs.
6 years ago. Edited 6 years ago.
slgwv club has replied to Don Barrett (aka DBs… club
The semantic link seems to be, "shallow water body that doesn't (usually) have a current."
6 years ago.
Don Barrett (aka DBs… club has replied to slgwv club
I think what is confusing is the use of the word for a body of water that typically lasts less than a day.
6 years ago.

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