n.
A swamp or bog formed by an accumulation of sphagnum moss, leaves, and decayed matter resembling peat.
[Cree maskek.]
Dictionary:
mus·keg (mŭs'kĕg') also mas·keg
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[Cree maskek.]
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A term derived from Chippewan Indian for “grassy bog.” In North America ecologists apply diverse usage, but most include peat bogs or tussock meadows, with variable woody vegetation such as spruce or tamarack. Plant remains accumulate when trapped in the water or in media such as sphagnum moss which inhibit decay. The peat might accrue indefinitely or might approach a steady state of raised bogs, blanket bogs, or forest if input became balanced by erosion or by loss as methane and CO2.
Organic terrain occurs on every continent. The largest expanses of it are in Russia (especially western Siberia) and Canada. Typical bog or spruce-larch muskeg develops in cool temperature and subarctic to arctic lands. In the subtropics and the tropics there is considerable organic terrain, as in Paraguay, Uruguay, and Guyana in South America. Thus, despite differences in climate or floristics, the phenomenon of peat formation persists if local aeration or biochemical conditions hinder decay. Despite climatic and biotic differences, gross peat structure categories seem comparable the world over. See also Bog; Peat.
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A term used in Canada to describe spring bogs.
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Muskeg is an acidic soil type common in Arctic and boreal areas, although it is found in other northern climates as well. Muskeg is more-or-less synonymous with bogland but muskeg is the standard term in non-Atlantic Canada and Alaska (while bog is more common elsewhere). The term is of Cree origin, maskek (ᒪᐢᑫᐠ) meaning low lying marsh.[1] Large tracts of this soil existing in Siberia may be called muskeg or bogland interchangeably. Muskeg consists of dead plants in various states of decomposition (as peat), ranging from fairly intact sphagnum moss, to sedge peat, to highly decomposed muck. Pieces of wood such as buried tree branches can make up five to 15 percent of the peat soil. Muskeg tends to have a water table very near the surface. As well, the sphagnum moss forming it can hold 15 to 30 times its own weight in water, allowing the spongy wet muskeg to form even on sloping ground. Muskeg patches are ideal habitats for beavers, pitcher plants, agaric mushrooms and a variety of other organisms.[2]
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Muskeg forms because permafrost, clay or bedrock prevents water drainage. The water from rain and snow collects in an area forming permanently waterlogged vegetation and stagnant pools. Muskeg is wet, acidic, and relatively infertile which prevents large trees from growing, although stunted Shore Pine, cottonwood, some species of Willow, and Black Spruce[3] are typically found. It needs two conditions to develop: abundant rain and cool summers. A dead plant that falls on dry soil is normally attacked by bacteria and fungi and quickly rots; if however the same plant lands in water or on saturated soil it faces a different fate. Less oxygen is available under water so aerobic bacteria and fungi fail to colonize the submerged debris effectively. In addition, cool temperatures retard bacterial and fungal growth. This causes slow decomposition, and thus the plant debris gradually accumulates to form peat and eventually muskeg. Depending on the underlying topography of the land, muskeg can reach depths of 30 metres (100 ft) or more.
Although at first glance muskeg resembles a plain covered with short grasses, a closer look will reveal a bizarre and almost unearthly landscape. Small stands of stunted and often dead trees that vaguely resemble Bonsai trees grow where land protrudes above the water table, with small pools of water stained a dark red scattered about. Its grassland appearance invites the unwary to walk on it, but even the most solid muskeg is spongy and waterlogged. Traveling through muskeg is a strange and dangerous experience for the unaccustomed. Muskeg can grow atop bodies of water, especially small ponds and streams. Because of the water beneath, the muskeg surface sometimes ripples underfoot. Thinner patches allow large animals to fall through, becoming trapped under the muskeg and drowning. Moose are at a special disadvantage in muskeg due to their long legs, minimal hoof area, and large mass. Young moose are occasionally encountered in muskeg covered ponds submerged up to their torsos or necks, unaware that the ground was not stable enough for them to walk on.
Muskeg can be a significant impediment to transportation. During the 1870s, muskeg in Northern Ontario was reported to have swallowed a railroad engine whole when a track was laid on muskeg instead of clearing down to bedrock. Many other instances have been reported of heavy construction equipment vanishing into muskeg in the spring as the frozen muskeg beneath the vehicle thawed. Construction in muskeg-laden areas sometimes requires the complete removal of the soil and filling with gravel. If the muskeg is not completely cleared to bedrock then its high water content will cause buckling and distortion from winter freezing, much like permafrost.
One method of working atop muskeg is to place large logs on the ground, then cover those logs with a thick layer of clay or other stable material. This is commonly called a corduroy road. To increase the effectiveness of the corduroy, prevent erosion[4] and to allow removal of material with less disturbance of the muskeg, sometimes a geotextile fabric is placed down before the logs.
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