
Rock Canyon History, Provo, UT
N 40° 15.870 W 111° 37.805
12T E 446424 N 4457305
There is a series of interpretive signs near the amphitheater of the Rock Canyon Park in Provo, Utah. One is a history sign.
Waymark Code: WMA18N
Location: Utah, United States
Date Posted: 10/30/2010
Views: 15
The text on the sign reads:
"Rock Canyon History
Rock Canyon has provided timber, farmland, water and minerals for Utah Valley residents. Water has been the most enduring and troubling resource. Overgrazing by livestock until the early 1950s decimated fragile plant communities above Rock Canyon, limiting water sheds ability to absorb snow or rain. As a result, flooding repeatedly devastated the area. This prompted Civilian Construction Corps men to build a large debris basin at the mouth of the canyon in 1934. It came just in time to help hold the largest flood in the canyons history in July of 1936. Tons of mud, boulders, and trees thundered out into the valley. Some of it over-ran the debris basin, and covered nearby farms with several feet of mud. Provo citizens lobbied the U.S. Congress in the 1930's to include the canyon in the Uinta National Forest, and they teamed up to rehabilitate its watershed. In 1957-61 livestock grazing was nearly eliminated, and 412 acres of camour trenches were cut by bulldozers on the most muddied slopes on the Cascade Mountain. within a few years the trenches were covered with grass and they continue to hold water and discharge it at a slower pace. Water is now directed into pipes halfway up the canyon, and provides about 5% of Provo's culinary water."
Marker Name: Rock Canyon History
 Marker Type: City
 County: Utah
 City: Provo
 Group Responsible for Placement: Parks and Recreation Dept of the City of Provo
 Date Dedicated: Unknown
 Marker Number: Unknown
 Web link(s) for additional information: http://parkfinder.provo.org/http://parkfinder.provo.org/
 Addtional Information: Not listed

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Visit Instructions:
In your log, please say if you learned something new, and if you took any extra time to explore the area once you stopped at the historic marker waymark.
If possible please post a photo of you OR your GPS at the marker location.
Also if you know of any additional links not already mentioned about this bit of Utah history please include that in your log.