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Environment & Energy

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sheshe2

(98,528 posts)
Sun Jan 6, 2013, 07:46 PM Jan 2013

Niagara Falls Frozen Over in 1911....WOW Beautiful Images. [View all]

[url=http://postimage.org/][img][/img][/url]
Image #3 is a scan of a picture postcard, originally hand-tinted, displayed on the Niagara Falls Public Library Web site. The card was postmarked August 25, 1911 (though the photograph probably wasn't taken in that year), and bore the following caption: "The cave of the Winds, gyved with a marvelous accumulation of ice and the great flow of water completely hidden by crystalline helmets. Such a sight is rarely to be witnessed, however for history records only three, the last time in 1886, when it is said, a million persons visited Niagara to see the marvelous exhibition of the ice king."




[url=http://postimage.org/][img][/img][/url]
The first in the set, a sepia-toned photograph listed as an Internet find on the website of the Niagara Falls Public Library, is of unknown date and origin, according to the documentation. It also appears on the Niagara Falls Live website, where its placement implies it was taken during the historic freeze of March 1848, when the falls actually "went dry" for a few days due to the formation of an ice dam on Lake Erie.




THE NUMBER one question everyone asks about this set of images is, "Does Niagara Falls ever really freeze over like this?" And the answer is yes. During an extended winter cold snap a hardened crust of ice can accumulate over parts of the falls — American Falls in particular — creating an amazing, naturally-formed ice sculpture, if you will, that has been known to reach a thickness of 50 feet. Neither the river nor the falls ever freezes solid, mind you. The water continues to flow beneath the ice at all times, albeit reduced to a mere trickle on rare occasions when ice jams block the river above the falls.

Historically, when this blanket of ice has spanned the entire Niagara River, the phenomenon has been known as the "ice bridge."
http://urbanlegends.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?site=http://www.cliftonhill.com/niagara%5Ffalls%5Fhistory/niagara%5Ffalls%5Fhistory%5Ficebridge/
Just as you see in the photos, people used to stroll and frolic on and around the frozen falls and even walk across the ice bridge, though no one has been allowed to do the latter since 1912, when the bridge unexpectedly broke apart and carried three tourists to their deaths.



More images and history at link



http://urbanlegends.about.com/library/bl_niagara_falls_frozen2.htm
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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That would be a sight liberal N proud Jan 2013 #1
Check this out: friendly_iconoclast Jan 2013 #2
Check what out????? n/t sheshe2 Jan 2013 #3
This, I think. valerief Jan 2013 #4
Ooops, the link didn't show up: friendly_iconoclast Jan 2013 #5
WOW. Thanks for the Awesome Pic. sheshe2 Jan 2013 #6
1848 OKIsItJustMe Jan 2013 #7
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