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Where is the sinks at Bear Lake?

Within Logan Canyon, about 10 minutes west of Bear Lake, there's a wide-open bowl known as the Sinks. The large indentation in the earth created by a natural sinkhole is the best spot in all of Cache Valley for sledding, snow tubing, and generally playing in the snow.



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Bear Lake's deepest point, at 208 feet, is located at the eastern edge between North and South Eden Canyons.

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Bear Lake contains abundant suspended microscopic particles of white-colored calcium carbonate (lime) that reflect the water's natural blue color back to the surface, giving the lake its intense turquoise-blue color.

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Bear Lake contains abundant suspended microscopic particles of white-colored calcium carbonate (lime) that reflect the water's natural blue color back to the surface, giving the lake its intense turquoise-blue color.

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Despite weighing more than 400 pounds, sumo wrestler, Kelly Gneiting, becomes only the fourth person to swim across Utah's Bear Lake and then back again.

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Summer recreational activities abound as sailing, waterskiing, and boating attract thousands to the lake. Bear Lake is also noted for its surrounding natural habitat and the production of succulent red raspberries, as well as cisco and lake trout from within the lake itself.

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BEAR LAKE WHITEFISH AND BONNEVILLE WHITE FISH – These fish are indistinguishable beyond 10 inches in length. The Bonneville whitefish have gray-blue spots along their sides until they reach that size. These whitefish are elongated, relatively cylindrical fish.

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You want to jump in but watch out for leeches - Review of Bear Lake, Rocky Mountain National Park, CO - Tripadvisor.

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If you plan to camp overnight, please use one of the many public and private camping areas around the lake (see map). No camping after 10 p.m. on the public beaches or exposed bed of Bear Lake.

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Bear Lake is stratified in summer-spring where lighter water overlies denser water. During the winter months the mixing processes of winds and surface cooling break down the layers and the lake freezes over. Bear Lake does not completely freeze over every year but typically three out of five years.

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Bear Lake is a natural freshwater lake on the Idaho-Utah border in the Western United States. About 109 square miles (280 km2) in size, it is split about equally between the two states.

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This was the first recorded account of Europeans seeing the beautiful lake. He attended one of the Native American gatherings at the south end of Bear Lake in 1819, aptly naming the area Black Bear Lake after the abundance of black bears in the area. This was later shortened to Bear Lake.

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The shells have lasted this long because of the calcium chemistry in Bear Lake water. Some that do get crushed become part of our sand. According to a U.S. Geological Survey study, the shells were in great abundance in the shallows of Bear Lake when the lake was around 50 feet higher and filled the whole valley.

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