Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The tree produces spiky green fruits about the size of a golf ball, which turn brown and drop off the tree over an extended period beginning in fall and continuing over the winter.
Bear Lake is a natural freshwater lake on the Idaho–Utah border in the Western United States.About 109 square miles (280 km 2) in size, it is split about equally between the two states; its Utah portion comprises the second-largest natural freshwater lake in Utah, after Utah Lake. [1]
The Bear Lake Monster is a lake monster urban legend which appears in folklore near Bear Lake, on the Utah–Idaho border. The myth originally grew from articles written in the 19th century by Joseph C. Rich , a Latter-day Saint settler in the area, purporting to report second-hand accounts of sightings of the creature.
Asellus aquaticus can breed throughout the year, if the temperature is high enough: they do not breed under cold temperatures. Maturity can be reached in few months under warm summer temperatures, but maturation may take as much as two years in permanently cold water bodies (e.g., high-latitude or mountain waters). [3]
The off shore areas may be called the pelagic zone, the photic zone may be called the limnetic zone and the aphotic zone may be called the profundal zone. Inland from the littoral zone, one can also frequently identify a riparian zone which has plants still affected by the presence of the lake—this can include effects from windfalls, spring ...
Bear Lake (Colorado), in Rocky Mountain National Park; Bear Lake (Idaho), an alpine lake in Custer County; Bear Lake (Idaho–Utah), along the Idaho–Utah border, first called Black Bear Lake; Bear Lake (Michigan), a lake in Kalkaska County; Bear Lake (Muskegon County, Michigan), which abuts Muskegon, Michigan; Bear Lake in Beaverhead County ...
Liquidambar, commonly called sweetgum [2] (star gum in the UK), [3] gum, [2] redgum, [2] satin-walnut, [2] styrax or American storax, [2] is the only genus in the flowering plant family Altingiaceae and has 15 species. [1] They were formerly often treated as a part of the Hamamelidaceae. They are native to southeast and east Asia, the eastern ...
The sediment in the water, more than 10 times as potent as normal, taxed city water filters and led to increased use of chemicals to keep water at safe levels in the towns.