Hump Day--History Day

Submitted by Anne Koski on Wed, 2017-06-07 00:00

"...still I am pretty sure that some few centuries from now the Portneuf will revive itself, discard the concrete girdle, and send our descendants scurrying back up to the benchlands with wet feet."  -Requiem For A River, Senator Perry Swisher, late 60s?

Today we looked at some primary documents that demonstrated diverse, changing feelings on the building of the concrete levees in the late 1960's, and then we investigated current plans to move levees, create access points and beautify our river.  We also looked at historical photographs of sections of the river and recreated these photographs on our ipads.  

A few things I learned:

-The levees were approved federally, but it took decades, and a few years of severe flooding for Pocatellians to vote in favor of contributing the small % of the funds that the federal government required.  

-We have exciting ideas for Rainee/Centenial parks as well as Raymond Park.  I hope to live to see their fruitions.  http://river.pocatello.us/

-Having students re-create historical photographs is a really cool, accesable activity.  I want to figure out a way to incorperate it into my teaching.http://river.pocatello.us/basics/

-JTUs are an obsolete unit used to measure turbidity, but that's not going to stop us from using Eric's old turbidity testing kit and comparing it with the data from the probeware we got.  (Spoiler alert, we didn't get equivilent values.)

Comments

Michael Helman's picture

Thank you for the summary and photos!

Brent Patch's picture

I thought it was interesting that on one of those documents from the City of Pocatello, the letterhead slogan was something like, "Pocatello, The gateway to the Industrial West" whereas we now bill ourselves as more of a gateway to the "Natural" West. It was a very telling statement to help me realize the difference in mentality from 50+ years ago where we wanted to put nature in it's box and as Anne so eloquently stated, "Now we want to make that box bigger and get in that box!"

Maria Wilson's picture

Anne  your post lets me dare to hope for the future 

Maria Wilson's picture

Anne  your post lets me dare to hope for the future 

Jay Millan's picture

A point that this blog and many ofthe comments illustrated is the healing powers of Mother Nature. It has been shown many times around the world that despite what mankind does, the Earth can still do it's thing and bounce back.