wallow
Wah-loh
A depression in the ground created by large animals — bison, elk, boar, rhinos — rolling and rubbing in mud or dust. Wallows serve multiple purposes: cooling, parasite removal, scent-marking, and social display. Old bison wallows on the Great Plains persisted for decades after the animals were gone, holding water and growing different vegetation than the surrounding grass — ghost baths.
Etymology
Old English wealwian, to roll. The word sounds like the action — heavy, slow, deliberate.
Notes
Also a whitewater term — a wallow is a depression in the river.
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