<h2><SPAN name="page_095">THE GREAT BASIN AND ITS PECULIAR LAKES</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
As our country was slowly being explored and settled, one region
was brought to light which Nature seemed to have left unfinished
and in a desolate condition. This barren stretch of country was once
marked upon the maps as the Great American Desert, and included a
large part of the extensive region lying between the Rocky Mountains
upon the east and the Sierra Nevada Mountains upon the west. To the
south lay the Grand Cañon of the Colorado, while upon the
north the boundary was formed by the cañons of the Snake
and Columbia rivers.</p>
<p class="indent">
After a time it was found that this region, covering about two
hundred and twenty-five thousand square miles, not only was extremely
dry, but had no outlet to the ocean. A rim of higher land all about
made of it so perfect a basin that it became known as the Great
Basin. None of the water that falls upon the surface of this basin
ever reaches the ocean through surface streams. Some of it soaks
into the rocks, but the greater part is evaporated into the dry
air.</p>
<p class="indent">
We have already learned something about the way in which the ridges
and hollows of the earth's surface are made. We have learned of
the wrinkling of the crust, of the formation of fissures, and of
the erosive work of running water. The interesting features of
the Great Basin are mainly the result of two causes: the sinking
of a portion of the earth's surface, and the lack of rainfall.</p>
<p class="indent">
Long ago the Wasatch Range of eastern Utah and the Sierra Nevadas
of California formed parts of a vast elevated plateau. Then there
came a time when the forces holding up the plateau were relaxed,
and as the weight of the plateau pressed it down, the solid rocks
broke into huge fragments. Some of the blocks thus made sank and
formed valleys; others were tilted or pushed up and formed mountains.
Thus the north and south mountain ranges and valleys of the Great
Basin were born.</p>
<p class="indent">
We must understand, then, that the Great Basin is not a simple
depression with higher land all about. The breaking up of the surface
produced many basins, large and small. Some of these basins are six
thousand feet above the level of the sea, others are much lower,
and one has been dropped below the level of the sea, so that if it
were not for barriers the water would flow in. Some of the basins
are rimmed all about by steep mountains, others are so broad and
flat that it is difficult to tell that they really are basins.
Many of the valleys are so connected with one another that if a
heavy rainfall should ever occur drainage systems would be quickly
established.</p>
<p class="indent">
The Great Basin now appears like the skeleton of a dried-up world; but
if the climate should change and become like that of the Mississippi
Valley, the surface of the desert would undergo a wondrous
transformation. The hundreds of basins, if fed by streams from
the surrounding mountains, would then become lakes. The highest,
overflowing, would empty into a lower, and this in turn into a
still lower basin, until the water had accumulated in vast inland
seas. These seas, overflowing the rim of the Great Basin at its
lowest points, would send rivers hastening away to the ocean.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 509px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/map002.jpg" width-obs="509" height-obs="649" alt="Map 2"></div>
<p class="indent">
What a region of lakes this would be for a time! Then they would
begin to disappear, for lakes are short-lived as compared with
mountains. Some would be filled with clay and gravel brought by
the streams. Others would be drained by a cutting down of their
outlets.</p>
<p class="indent">
Great Salt Lake, which is the only body of water in the Basin that
has ever sent a stream to the ocean, was lowered four hundred feet
by the washing away of the rock and earth at its outlet.</p>
<p class="indent">
We know that the rainfall never has been heavy in this region since
the Great Basin was formed, although at one time it was sufficiently
great to form two inland seas, one in northwestern Nevada, the
other in Utah.</p>
<p class="indent">
The chief reason for the dryness of the Great Basin is the presence
of that lofty barrier, the Sierra Nevada mountain range, between
the Basin and the Pacific Ocean. The storms, which usually come
from the ocean, are intercepted by this range, and the greater
portion of their moisture is taken away. The little moisture that
remains falls upon the highlands of the Great Basin, and so relieves
its surface from utter barrenness. The adjacent slopes of the Sierra
Nevada and Wasatch ranges furnish numerous perennial streams which
feed the lakes about the borders of the Basin, such as Great Salt
Lake, Pyramid, Walker, Mono, Honey, and Owens lakes. The wet weather
streams, flowing down the desert mountains for a short time each
year, frequently form broad, shallow lakes which disappear with
the coming of the summer sun.</p>
<p class="indent">
The climate of the Great Basin has changed from time to time. During
one period it was much drier than it is now, and the lakes were
nearly or quite dried up. It must have been a desolate region then,
shunned by animals and forbidden to man.</p>
<p class="indent">
During the Glacial period, a few thousand years ago, the climate
was moister and cooler than it is now. The mountains were covered
with deep snows, and glaciers crept down the slopes of the higher
peaks. Great Salt Lake covered all northwestern Utah; to this former
body of water the name Bonneville has been given, in honor of a noted
trapper. Pyramid, Winnemucca, Carson, Walker, and Honey lakes, now
separated from one another by sagebrush deserts, were then united
in one great lake, to which the name Lahontan has been given, in
honor of an early French explorer.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 513px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig042.jpg" width-obs="513" height-obs="404" alt="Fig. 42">
FIG. 42.—MONO LAKE, CALIFORNIA</div>
<p class="indent">
Lake Lahontan covered a large portion of northwestern Nevada and
penetrated into California. It was broken into long winding arms
and bays by various mountain ranges. The deepest portion of this
ancient lake is now occupied by Pyramid Lake, which is, perhaps,
the most picturesque of all the Basin lakes. Fish can live in the
waters of this lake, although nearly all the others are so salty
or so alkaline that they support none of the ordinary forms of
life.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 517px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig043.jpg" width-obs="517" height-obs="356" alt="Fig. 43">
FIG. 43.—ROUND HOLE, A SPRING IN THE SMOKE CREEK DESERT
<p class="imgnote">Bed of old Lake Lahontan</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
Upon the Black Rock Desert, in northern Nevada, there are large
springs once covered by Lake Lahontan, in which fish are found.
It is thought that the ancestors of these fish must have been left
there at the time of the drying up of the water.</p>
<p class="indent">
After the Glacial period the present arid climate began to prevail
in the land. Hundreds of the shallow lakes which had been scattered
over this extensive region disappeared. Others contained water for
only a portion of each year. A body of water which is not permanent,
but comes and goes with the seasons, we call a playa lake. Many of
these playa lakes present in summer a hard, yellow-clay floor of
many miles in extent and entirely free from vegetation. The beds
of others are covered with a whitish crust, formed of the various
salts which were in solution in the lake water.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 515px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig044.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="344" alt="Fig. 44">
FIG. 44.—ROGERS LAKE, MOHAVE DESERT
<p class="imgnote">A playa lake</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
An important feature of the lakes of the Great Basin is the presence
of large quantities of such substances as common salt, soda, borax,
and nitre. The ocean is salt because it has no outlet, while the
rivers of the globe are continually bringing into it various minerals,
dissolved from the rocks over which they flow. Lakes with outlets
are not salty, because with a continuous change of the water there
is no opportunity for the minerals to accumulate, although they
are always present in small quantities. Any lake which does not
receive enough running water to cause it to overflow the borders
of its basin, will in course of time become rich in various kinds
of salt.</p>
<p class="indent">
No two of the lakes of the Great Basin are alike in the composition
of their waters. This fact may be due to a difference in the rocks
about the lake basin, to the presence of varying mineral springs,
or to the drying up of one or more of the lakes at some time so
that their former salts were buried under sands and clays when
the water again filled the basin.</p>
<p class="indent">
Great Salt Lake contains little besides common salt. In Mono Lake,
soda and salt are equally important constituents, while Owens Lake
contains an excess of soda. In other basins borax was present in
such quantities that when the waters dried up it formed important
deposits. The value of these deposits is now fully understood, and
many enterprising companies are at work separating and purifying
the borax.</p>
<p class="indent">
Owens Lake was once fresh, although now it is so strong with soda
that it would destroy the skin if a bather should remain in it very
long. The former outlet of this lake was toward the south, through
a pass separating the Sierra Nevada from the Coso Mountains. For a
distance of thirty miles the old river-bed has been transformed
into a wagon road, and it is interesting to ride all day along the
bed of this dead river, past bold cliffs against which the waters
once surged and foamed. The river emptied far to the south, into a
broad, shallow lake whose former bed is now white with soda and
borax. The old beach lines stand out distinctly upon the slopes of
the enclosing mountains.</p>
<p class="indent">
The lake bed is now the seat of an important industry—the
gathering of the borax and its refining. There are extensive buildings
at one spot upon its border, and men come and go across the blinding
white surface. A twenty-mule team dragging three huge wagons creeps
slowly along the base of the distant mountains, but all that can
be distinguished is a cloud of dust.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 509px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig045.jpg" width-obs="509" height-obs="343" alt="Fig. 45">
FIG. 45.—FREIGHTING BORAX ACROSS THE DESERT</div>
<p class="indent">
The slow crumbling of the rocks, and the setting free of those
constituents which are soluble, the work of the streams in gathering
the rock waste into the lakes, the dry air and the heat of the long
summer days, have all conspired together to give us these valuable
deposits in the dried-up lakes of the Great Basin.</p>
<p class="indent">
No portion of the earth seems to be without value to man. The great
bodies of water are convenient highways. The rich valleys and timbered
mountains offer useful products. Even the deserts, where living
things of every description find the struggle for existence very
hard, become indispensable. If the climate in the Great Basin had
been moist, the salts would not have been preserved, but would
have been carried away to the ocean, from which only common salt
could have been recovered in commercial quantities.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 514px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig046.jpg" width-obs="514" height-obs="370" alt="Fig. 46">
FIG. 46.—MUSHROOM ROCK, PYRAMID LAKE
<p class="imgnote">Formed of calcareous tufa</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
The crossing of the Great Basin was dreaded by the early emigrants
on their way to the Pacific coast. In many cases the locations of
the few springs and water-courses were unknown, and the journey
over the vast barren stretches was fraught with danger.</p>
<p class="indent">
Stand upon a mountain in the desert some clear day in summer and
you will see range after range, with intervening sandy wastes,
stretching away to the horizon. The air below is tremulous with
heat, and every living thing that can move has sought the shade
of some rock or cliff. The plants seem almost dead, for the little
springs, hidden at rare intervals in the deep cañons, are
of no use to them.</p>
<p class="indent">
What transformations would be wrought upon these desert slopes if
it were possible for the soil to receive and retain large quantities
of water! Forest-covered mountains, green hillsides, rippling streams,
lakes, farms, orchards, and towns would appear as if by magic.</p>
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