Right now this is just a working file to help me gather my photos together
from various PhotoCDs.
Eastward, beyond the surf of the Pacific, beyond the tawny rolling
Coast Range and the wide central valley of California, rises the great wall of
the Sierra Nevada. Four hundred miles long, seventy-five miles wide, ten to more
than fourteen thousand feet in height, it ranks with the major mountain ranges of
the world. Certainly it is one of the most beautiful. Geologically, it is a
titled block of the earth's crust -- a long, continuous slope fronting the west,
and a short, breath-taking decline to the eastern deserts.
Truly the "Range of Light," as John Muir defined it, the Sierra Nevada rises
to the sun as a vast shining world of stone and snow and foaming waters, mellowed
by the forests growing upon it and the clouds and storms that flow over it.
-- Ansel Adams, 1938, in the foreword to Sierra Nevada: The John Muir
Trail (quoted in the Sierra chapter of his autobiography
)
Lake Tahoe
Mark Twain wrote the definitive treatise on Lake Tahoe in Roughing It
.
Yosemite National Park
Mono Lake
Mostly drained to support California agriculture...
Bodie
The nightlife here isn't what it used to be. In its heyday Bodie had 10,000
residents and a murder every day. Bodie is 8400' up into the the White Mountains
and is now a California state park.
Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest
In the White Mountains, just east of the Sierra. Some of these trees are 4,000
years old. They are the oldest living things on earth.
Mammoth Region
Here's the Devil's Postpile granite formation:
Alabama Hills
In the Eastern Sierra.
Sequoia/Kings Canyon National Parks
These parks include Mt. Whitney (14,495', highest peak in the Lower 48) and
catch all the rain so that it doesn't fall on the dry Eastern Sierra. The Giant
Sequoia can live up to 3,200 years and typically grow to a height of over 200
feet. They are the largest living things on earth.
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