Horicon Marsh

Horicon National Wildlife Refuge
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)

A boardwalk in the marsh
Map showing the location of Horicon National Wildlife Refuge
Map showing the location of Horicon National Wildlife Refuge

Location of Horicon Marsh

Location Dodge, Fond du Lac counties, Wisconsin, United States
Nearest city Waupun, Wisconsin
Coordinates 43°35′00″N 88°38′00″W / 43.58333°N 88.63333°W / 43.58333; -88.63333Coordinates: 43°35′00″N 88°38′00″W / 43.58333°N 88.63333°W / 43.58333; -88.63333
Area 21,400 acres (87 km2)
Established 1941
Governing body U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Website Horicon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge
Designated December 4, 1990

Horicon Marsh is a marsh located in northern Dodge and southern Fond du Lac counties of Wisconsin. It is the site of both a national and a state wildlife refuge. The extinct glacial lake is the largest freshwater cattail marsh in the United States.[1]

Geological history

Horicon Marsh was created by the Green Bay lobe of the Wisconsin glaciation during the Pleistocene era. The glacier, during its advance created many drumlins (a type of knoll) in the region, many of which have become the islands of Horicon Marsh. The marsh and surrounding Dodge County have the highest concentration of drumlins in the world.

During the glacier's retreat, a moraine was created, forming a natural dam holding back the waters from the melting glacier and forming Glacial Lake Horicon. The Rock River slowly eroded the moraine, and the lake drained. As the levels of silt, clay and peat accumulated in the former lake's basin, the Horicon Marsh was formed.

The Horicon Marsh State Wildlife Area is one of nine units of the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve system, being considered to contain unique, representative evidence of the Ice Age of the Pleistocene era.[2]

Inhabited history

The Horicon Marsh area has been inhabited by humans, including the Paleo-Indians, the Hopewellian people and the Mound Builders, since the ending of the last Ice Age. Dozens of 1200-year-old effigy mounds were built by the Mound Builders in the surrounding low ridges.[1] Arrowheads have been found dating to 12,000 years ago. Later the region was inhabited by the Potawotomi, primarily to the east of the marsh, and the Ho-Chunk to the west. Seven well-traveled Native American foot trails met at the southern end of the marsh at the present location of Horicon.

When Europeans first arrived in the area, they named the marsh "The Great Marsh of the Winnebagos". The first permanent modern settlement along the marsh was the town of Horicon. In 1846, a dam was built to power the town's first sawmill. The dam held the water in the marsh, causing the water level to rise by nine feet. The "marsh" was called Lake Horicon, and was, at the time, called the largest man-made lake in the world.

Central waterway

In 1869, the dam was torn down by order of the State Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of landowners whose land had been flooded.[3] The area became a marsh once more. In 1883, two sportsmen's clubs reported huge flocks of geese in the marsh, and stated that 500,000 ducks hatched annually, and 30,000 muskrats and mink were trapped in the southern half of the marsh.[4] Both birds and hunters flocked to the area, and the local duck population was devastated. From 1910 to 1914, an attempt was made to drain the marsh and convert it into farmland; these attempts failed, and afterwards the land was widely considered to be useless.[5]

Horicon National Wildlife Refuge

A Purple Martin captured a Four Spotted Chaser

In 1927, the Wisconsin State Legislature, after pressure from conservationists beginning in 1921, passed the Horicon Marsh Wildlife Refuge Bill, providing for the construction of a dam to raise the water to normal levels and for the acquisition of the land by the government. During the 1940s, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service bought the northern portions of the marsh.[6]

Presently, the marsh is 32,000 acres (130 km2) in area, most of it open water and cattail marsh. The southern third, approximately 11,000 acres (45 km2), is owned by the state of Wisconsin and forms the Horicon Marsh State Wildlife Area, which was established as a nesting area for waterfowl and resting area for migratory birds. It is managed by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR). Millions of waterfowl, including over 200,000 Canada geese, migrate through the marsh.[1]

The northern two-thirds, approximately 21,400 acres (87 km2), forms the Horicon National Wildlife Refuge. Originally created as a nesting area for the redhead duck, it is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The refuges are habitats for many species of birds, especially ducks, great blue herons, and Canada geese (which have become increasingly common since the 1980s), as well as fish, frogs, snakes, turtles, mammals, insects and plants.[7]

Horicon Marsh was designated a Ramsar site on December 4, 1990.[8]

Horicon Marsh in the Spring

References

  1. 1 2 3 Will, Tracy (1997). Wisconsin. Oakland, California: Compass American Guides. p. 83. ISBN 1-878867-49-0.
  2. http://dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/wildlife_areas/horicon/, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
  3. Enjoy Horicon Marsh
  4. Thomas E. Dahl, Gregory J. Allord (1996). History of Wetlands in the Conterminous United States, in National Water Summary on Wetland Resources - United States Geological Survey Water Supply Paper 2425 (Report). United States Geological Survey. ISBN 978-0-607-85696-5. Retrieved 2011-09-25.
  5. http://dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/wildlife_areas/horicon/humhist.htm Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, accessed March 13, 2011
  6. "Horicon Marsh Human History", "Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources", October 20, 2009, accessed February 21, 2011
  7. http://dnr.wi.gov/org/land/wildlife/wildlife_areas/horicon/wildlife.htm Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, accessed March 13, 2011
  8. "The Annotated Ramsar List: United States of America", "The Ramsar Convention of Wetlands", January 14, 2011, accessed February 22, 2011

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.

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