01-02-2017, 01:36 PM
[font "Comic Sans MS"][#800000]Every year after ice-up on Mantua, the subject of areas of bad ice crop up in condition reports and fishing reports for Mantua. Lots of folks have seen them and a few have even been victimized by them. They do exist and folks need to use caution near them. I have no disagreement with any of this.
However, the source of these bad spots has intrigued me for several years and I did some research into the possible causes. The most commonly used cause is there are springs coming up from the floor of the reservoir. And this may be the cause. But verification of said springs doesn’t seem to exist.
I pulled up some pre-reservoir topo maps of the Mantua Valley dated 1955 and the only springs shown on those maps are the very same ones shown on today’s topo maps and they all exist right at the very edge of the reservoir or above its high-water line. There isn’t a single spring shown anywhere in the valley that now has reservoir water over it. I don’t have a clue as to what minimum size requirement the USGS needed to list a spring on its topo maps, but IF there were some springs in the valley, they were too small to be listed.
I found a thesis from a USU graduate student (Karen C. Rice) from 1987 on the Hydrogeology and Hydrochemistry of Springs in Mantua Valley and Vicinity, North-Central Utah that listed 11 springs feeding the reservoir and all were outside the boundaries of the reservoir proper.
Another possibility would be gas pockets in the valley; probably methane. But I couldn’t find any references that showed, or indicated the probability of, any gas pockets within the Mantua Valley.
So, the only thing we know for sure is that these bad ice spots exist. We don’t know for sure how many of them exist or their approximate locations – just that they are there somewhere. Nobody knows for sure what causes them as far as I can determine, but they are being caused by something. So be aware and be safe.[/#][/font]
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However, the source of these bad spots has intrigued me for several years and I did some research into the possible causes. The most commonly used cause is there are springs coming up from the floor of the reservoir. And this may be the cause. But verification of said springs doesn’t seem to exist.
I pulled up some pre-reservoir topo maps of the Mantua Valley dated 1955 and the only springs shown on those maps are the very same ones shown on today’s topo maps and they all exist right at the very edge of the reservoir or above its high-water line. There isn’t a single spring shown anywhere in the valley that now has reservoir water over it. I don’t have a clue as to what minimum size requirement the USGS needed to list a spring on its topo maps, but IF there were some springs in the valley, they were too small to be listed.
I found a thesis from a USU graduate student (Karen C. Rice) from 1987 on the Hydrogeology and Hydrochemistry of Springs in Mantua Valley and Vicinity, North-Central Utah that listed 11 springs feeding the reservoir and all were outside the boundaries of the reservoir proper.
Another possibility would be gas pockets in the valley; probably methane. But I couldn’t find any references that showed, or indicated the probability of, any gas pockets within the Mantua Valley.
So, the only thing we know for sure is that these bad ice spots exist. We don’t know for sure how many of them exist or their approximate locations – just that they are there somewhere. Nobody knows for sure what causes them as far as I can determine, but they are being caused by something. So be aware and be safe.[/#][/font]
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Bob Hicks, from Utah
I'm 82 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
"Free men do not ask permission to bear arms."
I'm 82 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
"Free men do not ask permission to bear arms."