"There's a beaver dam in northern Canada that's twice as wide as the Hoover Dam, and was discovered from satellite photos because it's so remote, and forms a wetland delta despite there not being any distinct creeks or rivers feeding into it."
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"There's a beaver dam in northern Canada that's twice as wide as the Hoover Dam, and was discovered from satellite photos because it's so remote, and forms a wetland delta despite there not being any distinct creeks or rivers feeding into it." --Beaver Stan Account (on Bluesky), from January 2024.
Very Canadian #JoyScrolling ("If we thought in terms of hockey rinks, that’s 1600 hockey rinks of water.") Sadly, no alt-text for the photographs in the article. #Beavers
https://parks.canada.ca/pn-np/nt/woodbuffalo/nature/beaver_gallery
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"There's a beaver dam in northern Canada that's twice as wide as the Hoover Dam, and was discovered from satellite photos because it's so remote, and forms a wetland delta despite there not being any distinct creeks or rivers feeding into it." --Beaver Stan Account (on Bluesky), from January 2024.
Very Canadian #JoyScrolling ("If we thought in terms of hockey rinks, that’s 1600 hockey rinks of water.") Sadly, no alt-text for the photographs in the article. #Beavers
https://parks.canada.ca/pn-np/nt/woodbuffalo/nature/beaver_gallery
@azteclady I wish I had a pic of the one I saw at Takatz Bay in SE Alaska! Maybe not quite so many hockey rinks, but it was this vast network of dams that basically formed an entire forest wetland much like what the article describes... It was so cool; I can't imagine how long the beavers were at it – generations maybe?
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"There's a beaver dam in northern Canada that's twice as wide as the Hoover Dam, and was discovered from satellite photos because it's so remote, and forms a wetland delta despite there not being any distinct creeks or rivers feeding into it." --Beaver Stan Account (on Bluesky), from January 2024.
Very Canadian #JoyScrolling ("If we thought in terms of hockey rinks, that’s 1600 hockey rinks of water.") Sadly, no alt-text for the photographs in the article. #Beavers
https://parks.canada.ca/pn-np/nt/woodbuffalo/nature/beaver_gallery
Beavers just quietly get on with improving their environment for their own and other's benefit. They never ask for permission. They just get on with the job.
They're the animal equivalent of the litter pickers and the people who keep paths clear. The guerrilla pruners who cut back the brambles. The ones who plant bulbs in public spaces.
Be The Best Beaver You Can Be.
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J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic