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<br />I <br /> <br />14 : <br /> <br />2 <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br /> <br />1789 <br /> <br />One of the most striking peculiarities of thes!, rivers is that they rise downward. <br />In April the Arkansas at Fort Dodge, is aisandy bed, a fourth of a mile in width, <br />and with possibly an average of three or foUr inches of water. In June, when the <br />mountains send forth their floods of melted snow, the river swells, the current <br />increases in power, and washes out long channels in the sandy bed. When the banks <br />show a rise of two feet the waters cut channeis in the sand five or six feet deep, and <br />covering probably a full third of the distance from bank to bank. At these times the <br />current may be said to be a huge wave of sand surging, rolling, turning; and Bhifting <br />with incessant activity. Where there is six feel of water in the morning, there may by <br />noon be a bar with but an inch. By night the ~ar may be gone and a deep channel in <br />its place. These channels are from ten Ita thirty feet wide, with generally <br />perpendicular sides. Some force will set a CUlTent in a particular direction across a <br />bar. In a few moments a channel from three to six feet deep is cut, through which the <br />water pours as in a mill-race. A Bhift or cha!lge above diverts the current to Borne <br />other direction, and in almost as few moments the recent channel is filled up to <br />within a few inches of the surface of the water, As the currents by turns set in almost <br />every conceivable direction with reference to the general course of the stream, so the <br />channels may be parallel, oblique, or even perPendicular to that general course. Even <br />leaving out of consideration the danger of quicksands, it can be readily seen that the <br />crossing of such a stream iB no child's-play. A good place of entrance being found, <br />the horse and rider, stripped of every superfluous article, wade in. For a few paces <br />the horse steps along in water but a couple o(inches in depth. Without a moment's <br />notice or preparatory deepening, his fore feet go down under him, and he plunges <br />head first into swimming water with a tremendous current. He has hardly recovered <br />the shock, and struck out fairly in swimming,;before his chest strikes a wall of sand, <br />on which, after many struggles and plunges, he finally succeeds in obtaining a <br />footing. Again he walks on in shallow water, again to be plunged Buddenly into a <br />treacherous channel, again to scramble, plunge, and strain to get out of it. Imagine <br />this done over and over again for twenty or thirty limes, and with an infinity of <br />variations, and an idea can be formed of the crossing of a plainB river in high water. <br />All the streams which come from the mountains are the same in this peculiarity" <br />(Dodge 1877:22-23). <br /> <br /> <br />, <br /> <br /> <br />Coues (1895:435), while documenting Zebulon Pike's expedition of 1805-1806, gives <br />another account on river characteristics, from his ob~rvations in 1864, saying: <br /> <br />"Queer river that--a great ditch, choke full of grassy islets, Btretching through the <br />treeless prairie like a spotted snake, some Beasons so dry you can't wet your foot in it <br />for miles, and have to dig for a drink, sometimes a raging flood 200 yards wide." <br /> <br />This COUC8 quote was utilized as testimony as to the; character of the Arkansas River before the <br />U.S. Supreme Court in October 19M, in the interstate controversy of the Kansas - Colorado suit <br />(SteineI1926:215-217). <br /> <br />Even the earliest reported floods in the Arkansas Valley had impacts on the early <br />occupants. In 1866, a spring ice jamb in the river near William Bent's "New Fort" backed <br />