Monthly Archive: January 2023

Red Butte Garden Sign – Salt Lake City, Utah

Red Butte Garden Sign - Salt Lake City, Utah

The entrance sign for Red Butte Garden at the University of Utah. Red Butte Garden is 100 acre combination botanical garden, arboretum, and outdoor amphitheater in the foothills of the Wasatch Mountains above Salt Lake City. The Garden is probably best known for its summer outdoor concert series popular among independent musicians and bands.

Lincoln Highway Marker – Sugarhouse, Utah

Lincoln Highway Marker - Sugarhouse, Utah

A marker for the Lincoln Highway, found in Sugarhouse, Utah, a neighborhood in Salt Lake City. The Lincoln Highway was the first transcontinental highway in the United States, and the first built specifically for the automobile. The Lincoln Highway runs coast-to-coast from Times Square in New York City west to Lincoln Park in San Francisco. Its total original length upon completion in 1913 was 3,389 miles.  The concrete highway marker in the picture, is one of 3,000 erected along the highway by Boy Scout troops in 1928. The highway is named after Abraham Lincoln,  the 19th president of the United States. He is best known for his time in office during the Civil War, and the formal freeing of the slaves with the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.

Bonneville Shoreline Trail – Wasatch Mountains, Utah

Bonneville Shoreline Trail - Wasatch Mountains, Utah

The Bonneville Shoreline Trail is a mixed use trail for cyclists and hikers that when completed will stretch more than 150 miles between the Idaho border, and Nephi, Utah. The trail roughly follows the shoreline of the ancient Lake Bonneville, in the foothills of the Wasatch Mountains. The trail is expected to pass within 20 miles of 80% of Utah’s population.

Lake Bonneville, the result of cooler temperatures and higher precipitation during the Late Pleistocene, was the largest of four deep water lakes to exist in the Great Basin over the last 800,000 years. At its greatest extent 18,000 years ago, the lake was more than 980 feet deep, and covered over 20,000 square miles, nearly the size of Lake Michigan. While the lake receded from its maximum extent over thousands of years, one particular event, the Bonneville Flood has been documented in the geologic record, when an alluvial dam on Marsh creek, part of the drainage of the Snake River, was finally breached by rising lake levels. This released over the course of a year, more than 1,200 cu mi of water into the Snake River, and lowered the lake more than 430 feet.

The lake was named after Benjamin Louis Eulalie de Bonneville, an officer in the US military, fur trapper, and explorer of the American West. The largest extant remnants of the lake today are the Great Salt Lake, Utah Lake and Sevier Lake.