Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Lake Bonneville In Utah County.






I had to redo these, because I didn't want my name on it.
Map 1- This map shows the municipalities of Utah County in relation to the ancient lake.
Map 2- This is for those who want to get an idea of where they lived in relation to the lake.
Map 3- This shows the high risk areas for liquefaction (the darker the red, the higher the risk) and how it relates to the lake.
Map 4- This shows the remnants of the ancient lake that still exists in the "fresh water lake", Utah Lake. On a nice day, the lake doesn't glow from toxic waste. J/K.
Map 5- Just threw this in to show population density for the county in a choroplethic display.

Just in case anyone was curious about what lake Bonneville is, Lake Bonneville was a large, ancient lake that existed from about 32 to 14 thousand years ago. At its largest, Lake Bonneville was about 325 miles long, 135 miles wide, and had a maximum depth of over 1,000 feet. Three major shorelines were left by Lake Bonneville, and one by the Great Salt Lake. The Provo and Bonneville shorelines of Lake Bonneville can be seen as terraces or benches along many mountains in western USA. Fish lived in Lake Bonneville; amphibians, waterfowl, and other birds inhabited its marshes; and animals such as buffalo, horses, bears, rodents, deer, camels, bighorn sheep, musk oxen, and mammoths roamed its shores.

No comments: