June 1994
the monthly newsletter for people who live, work or play on the Upper Mississippi River
By John Sagan
In 1545, in the Bolivian An dies, conquering Spaniards discovered what was to become the richest mountain ever mined. By the 1950s, the silver, copper, lead, tin, tungsten and bismuth mined from it had surpassed any other mountain. One of the world's highest cities, Potosi. can be found there among the peaks. The name "Potosi" soon became synonymous with great and unlimited wealth, after Miguel Cervantes wrote the phrase "worth a Potosi" in Don Quixote de la Mancha. Towns around the world named themselves after Potosi, including a small town in Wisconsin near the Mississippi River, and Potosi Station, a little down the valley from it, right on the river. Here the Potosi Canal carried huge amounts of lead mined from the nearby hills to the river. In the middle of the 18th century the French learned of the lead mines when they obtained some fine lead for ammunition from the indigenous people, who were later called the Winnebagoes. These mines were jealously guarded by the Winnebagoes, who worked them for barter
By Roger Lacher
Wading barefoot in muddy backwaters, or knee deep in a trout stream you stub your toe on something that moves! Your reaction is as predictable and primitive as the creature you picture- Jurassic jaws clenched on your calf, its small eyes intent in a huge head, neck stretched and wrenching the bone out of your leg, shell like a filthy fossil, cold-blooded claws imbedding the bottom to drag you down. Our image of the snapping turtle is right down there with snakes. Indeed, "chelydra serpentina" translates to "turtle snake," no doubt based on the long flexible neck capable of lightning strikes at food or fools. A more typical encounter occurs from the comfort of a car on highways along the Mississippi. The critter's crossing the road, of course, to get to the other side. Egg-laying sites are select habitats that often parallel our rail and auto
Snappers are more mellow in the water, but watch out for muskrats! "They slash, bite, and chew. You'll surely need stitches."
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corridors. Some turtles get flattened, and some get picked up for supper or sale as fish-market delicacies - $3.99 a pound at a popular rivertown outlet. This summer mortality of mature females is a factor in Minnesota designating snappers a species of "special concern." John Moriarty of the Minnesota Herpetological Society, suggests that concerned motorists assist road-shoulder
(Snapper continued on page 2)
$2
Worth a Potosi
Snapper ~
Vol. 2, No. 6
(Potosi continued on page 3)
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