The Things You Find...
Feb. 21st, 2009 10:56 amI'm trying to locate current contact information on some folks for my godfather, who doesn't have internet. One of the people lives or lived in Cass Lake, Minnesota.
Cass Lake History
This site doesn't pertain directly to finding the person in question, but I was amused to find something called the Lost Forty. It's forty acres of virgin forest that was left untouched because it got mistakenly mapped as being under water.
Worthwhile place to go, if you want to see what part of Minnesota was like before the loggers came in the 1800s.
Cass Lake History
This site doesn't pertain directly to finding the person in question, but I was amused to find something called the Lost Forty. It's forty acres of virgin forest that was left untouched because it got mistakenly mapped as being under water.
Worthwhile place to go, if you want to see what part of Minnesota was like before the loggers came in the 1800s.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-21 06:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-21 06:44 pm (UTC)Having been a cartographer for all of my working life, I LOVED the bit about it having been mistakenly mapped as under water - especially since for the past 30-something years I've been mapping what's underwater!
no subject
Date: 2009-02-21 09:56 pm (UTC)Have you mapped things like volcanoes underwater? Just curious.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-21 09:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-21 10:19 pm (UTC)Mind you, the Captain almost had a fit when we found one of them, becasue he'd passed within a very few feet of it with the big survey vessel, and it was later found by one of the much smaller (and much shallower) survey launches, and if he'd been just a few feet over on the way into the Strait, he'd have ripped open the bottom of the CSS 'Baffin'.
Then there's the story about the hydrographic survey in the Pacific which ran aground on a coral reef. The front of the survey launch was rammed into the coral, but the sonar in the mid-section still showed a depth of over 300'...