- Location
- Bountiful, land of rocks
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,615153112,00.html
Road closure hurts many
It is evident from recent letters regarding Salt Creek that people are being misled. I visited Salt Creek innumerable times over the past 35 years doing research. Let me set the record straight.
ORV's have never damaged Salt Creek. The Park Service excluded ORV's 35 years ago.
It is a creek only during spring runoff and rarely flows as far as the bridge near the visitors center.
The road is mostly in the bottom of a sandy wash, so vehicle damage is minimal. The oily slick sometimes seen comes from decomposing vegetation, not vehicles.
Flash floods cause more erosion than the cars.
The majority of vehicles in Salt Creek are family cars with families in them.
The 14-mile road in Salt Creek has been used by thousands for 40 years whose principal destination has been the incredible Angle Arch, unique in all the world.
The road closure crippled archaeological research and deprived many people — especially the disabled and elderly — from visiting.
Steven Manning
Utah Archaeological Research Institute
North Salt Lake
Road closure hurts many
It is evident from recent letters regarding Salt Creek that people are being misled. I visited Salt Creek innumerable times over the past 35 years doing research. Let me set the record straight.
ORV's have never damaged Salt Creek. The Park Service excluded ORV's 35 years ago.
It is a creek only during spring runoff and rarely flows as far as the bridge near the visitors center.
The road is mostly in the bottom of a sandy wash, so vehicle damage is minimal. The oily slick sometimes seen comes from decomposing vegetation, not vehicles.
Flash floods cause more erosion than the cars.
The majority of vehicles in Salt Creek are family cars with families in them.
The 14-mile road in Salt Creek has been used by thousands for 40 years whose principal destination has been the incredible Angle Arch, unique in all the world.
The road closure crippled archaeological research and deprived many people — especially the disabled and elderly — from visiting.
Steven Manning
Utah Archaeological Research Institute
North Salt Lake