Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Pywiack Cascade

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Type
  
Horsetail

Average flow rate
  
120 cu ft/s (3.4 m/s)

Number of drops
  
1

Total height
  
600 ft (180 m)

Height
  
183 m

Watercourse
  
Tenaya Canyon

Pywiack Cascade tedmullerusOutdoorHiking20112011imgJul1217xjpg

Location
  
Yosemite National Park, California

Similar
  
Yosemite National Park, Lehamite Falls, Royal Arch Cascade, Silver Strand Falls, Snow Creek Falls

The Pywiack Cascade is a waterfall in Yosemite National Park within the U.S. state of California. It is located a few miles downstream from the outlet of Tenaya Lake on Tenaya Creek at the head of the steep and rugged granite gorge, Tenaya Canyon. The waterfall can be viewed from Glacier Point, or by a 6-mile (9.7 km) hike from Olmsted Point, but the canyon is dangerous and the waterfall is unsafe to be reached on foot. The waterfall is highly seasonal. It typically rages in the spring and early summer while shrinking to a trickle by late summer to mid-autumn.

Map of Pywiack Cascade, California, USA

The water of the Pywiack Cascade slides down a steep angle of solid granite, for a total of about 600 feet (180 m). A small waterfall lies directly below the main drop. Below that, the creek continues over jumbled talus for less than a quarter of a mile (0.4 km) before it plunges over another large waterfall. Not much farther downstream is Three Chute Falls whose waters continue on into Mirror Lake and then finally empty into the Merced River, within Yosemite Valley.

To the right of the Cascade while looking straight at it, there is another, ephemeral waterfall that tumbles down a steep granite cliff. This waterfall is of very little volume but is much taller than Pywiack Cascade.

"Py-we-ack" in the native language means "glistening rocks", and the native people applied it to both the creek and Tenaya Lake, due to the abundance of glacial polish in the upper Tenaya basin. The name "Pywiack" has since been applied to Pywiack Dome.

References

Pywiack Cascade Wikipedia


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