Actually, Cresby, Sandy is rather sandy because anciently, most of Utah was covered by a massive inland sea called Lake Bonneville (LB). The Great Salt Lake (GSL) (and its tributary Lake Utah) are the remaining vestiges of LB, and at 1,700 sq. miles (75 miles long and 28 miles wide) GSL is 1/10th the size of its predecessor, LB. (You can still see Lake Bonneville's ancient shoreline, known now as "The Bench" rimming the base of our Wasatch mountains, at about the 150-meter level up from the valley floor.)
Sandy is at the mouth of the Little Cottonwood and Big Cottonwood Canyons and their creeks by the same name. Those creeks to this day drain those canyons where Alta, Snowbird, Brighton, and Solitude ski resorts reside and the creeks, over the eons, have deposited massive amounts of sand in "deltas" at the canyon mouths. Those deltas form plateaus upon which some of Sandy's ritzier homes are today. The geographical centre of Sandy, up until about a year ago, was a large commercial sand pit/gravel quarry. The owners sold the quarry and (following a massive public debate/battle/vote) is now transforming into a Wal-Mart/Lowe's shopping centre and upscale townhomes and condominiums...But most of Sandy is, as our name implies, built upon sand.
My neighborhood, however, is up on the bench and is called "Granite", for an equally appropriate reason. Some of the granite boulders in my garden are the size of Volkswagen Beetles and weight many tons. But the sand had to come from somewhere, didn't it?
![[santa] [santa] [santa]](/data/assets/smilies/santa.gif)
Mufasa
(aka Dave of Sandy, Utah, USA)
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