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HOW NIAGARA ALMOST RAN DRY.

On March 29, 1848, a remarkable phenomenon occurred. The. preceding winter had been intensely cold, and the ice formed on Lake Erie was unusually thick. In the warm days of early spring the mass of ice was loosened around the shores of the lake and detached from them. During the forenoon of the day named, a stiff easterly wind moved it up the lake. A little before sunset the wind chopped suddenly round, and blew a gale from the west. This brought the vast ice back again with such tremendous force that it filled in the neck of the lake and its outlet so as to form a very effective darn, that caused a remarkable diminution in the outflow of the water. Of course it needed but little time for the Falls to drain off the water below this dam. The consequence was that on the morning of the following day the river was nearly half gone. The American Channel had dwindled to a deep and narrow creek. The British Channel seemed to have been smitten with a quick consumption, and to be first passing away. Far up from the head of Goat Island and out into the Canadian Rapids, and from the foot of Goat Island out beyond the Old Tower to the deep channel of the Horseshoe Fall, tire water was gone. The rocks were bare, black and forbidding. The roar of Niagara had subsided to a moan. This extraordinary syncope of the waters lasted all the day, and night closed over the strange scene. But during the night the dam gave away, and the next morning the river was restored in all its strength, beauty, and majesty.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DUNST18770223.2.20

Bibliographic details

Dunstan Times, Issue 775, 23 February 1877, Page 4

Word Count
285

HOW NIAGARA ALMOST RAN DRY. Dunstan Times, Issue 775, 23 February 1877, Page 4

HOW NIAGARA ALMOST RAN DRY. Dunstan Times, Issue 775, 23 February 1877, Page 4

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