<h2><SPAN name="page_031">THE CAÑONS OF THE SIERRA NEVADA MOUNTAINS</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
The western half of our country contains the deepest and most
picturesque cañons in the world. Those of the Colorado and
Snake rivers form trenches in a comparatively level but lofty plateau
region. The cañons of the Sierra Nevada Range, on the contrary,
take their rise and extend for much of their length among rugged
snowcapped peaks which include some of the highest mountains in
the United States. All these cañons are the work of erosion.
The rivers did not find depressions formed ready for them to occupy,
but had to excavate their channels by the slow process of grinding
away the solid rock.</p>
<p class="indent">
The streams of the Sierra Nevada mountains begin their course in
steep-walled alcoves under the shadows of the high peaks, where
they are fed by perpetual snow-banks. Soon they bury themselves
between granite walls, which at last tower three thousand feet
above their roaring waters. After many miles the cañons
widen, the walls decrease in height, and the streams come out upon
the fertile stretches of the Great Valley of California.</p>
<p class="indent">
Nature works in many ways. Her tools are of different kinds, but
the most important one is running water. The forms which she produces
are dependent upon the kind of rock upon which she works. Where
the surface of the earth is soft the results of her labor are not
very interesting, but if the crust is hard the forms which she
produces are often so remarkable that they arouse our wonder and
admiration.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 514px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig012.jpg" width-obs="514" height-obs="351" alt="Fig. 12">
FIG. 12.—SAN JOAQUIN RIVER EMERGING UPON THE PLAIN OF
THE GREAT VALLEY</div>
<p class="indent">
In shaping the Sierra Nevada mountains Nature had a grand opportunity.
Here she produced the Yosemite Valley, which has a setting of cliffs
and waterfalls that attract people from all over the world. Hetch-Hetchy
Valley at the north of the Yosemite, and Tehipite and King's River
cañons at the south, are interesting places, but not so
majestic and inspiring as the Yosemite.</p>
<p class="indent">
Nature never seems satisfied with her work. After she has created
a piece of wonderful scenery she proceeds to destroy it. The great
cliffs of the Yosemite will sometime lose their grandeur and be
replaced by gentle slopes down which the streams will flow quietly.
The mountains of the Laurentian highlands in the northeastern portion
of the continent undoubtedly were once lofty and picturesque, but
there were no people upon the earth at that time to enjoy this
scenery. Now these mountains have become old and are nearly worn
down.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig013.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="347" alt="Fig. 13">
FIG. 13.—WHERE THE CAÑONS BEGIN UNDER PRECIPITOUS PEAKS
<p class="imgnote">The head of the King's River</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
In one portion of the earth after another, Nature raises great
mountain ranges and immediately proceeds to remove them. This continent
was discovered and California was settled at the right time for
the Sierra Nevadas to be seen in all their grandeur.</p>
<p class="indent">
When the pioneers came in sight of the Sierra Nevada (snowy range),
they little dreamed of the cañons hidden among these mountains.
Gold, and not scenery, was the object of their search. The great
cañons were outside of the gold regions, and so inaccessibly
situated that no one except the Indians looked upon them until
1851. In that year a party of soldiers following the trail of some
thieving Indians discovered and entered the Yosemite Valley, but
it was not explored until 1855. For many years the valley could be
reached only by the roughest trails, but as its advantages became
more widely known roads were built, and there are now three different
wagon routes by which it may be entered.</p>
<p class="indent">
The history of the Yosemite Valley is like that of all the other
cañons of the Sierra Nevada mountains. Long ago there were
no high mountains in eastern California. If there had been explorers
crossing the plains in those days, they would have found no rugged
wall shutting them off from the Pacific. There came a time, however,
when the surface of the western portion of America was broken by
violent earthquake movements, and hundreds of fissures were formed.
Some of the earth blocks produced by these fissures were shoved
upward, while others were dropped. One enormous block, which was
to form the Sierra Nevada, was raised along its eastern edge until
it stood several thousand feet above the adjoining country. The
movement was like that of a trap-door opened slightly, so that
upon one side—in this case the western one—the slope
was long and gentle, while upon the east it was very abrupt.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 784px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig014.jpg" width-obs="784" height-obs="509" alt="Fig. 14">
FIG. 14.—THE YOSEMITE VALLEY</div>
<p class="indent">
Nature, the sculptor, took this mountain block in hand, and with
the aid of running water began to carve its surface into a most
intricate system of cañons and ridges. The streams first
flowed over the easiest slopes to the Great Valley of California,
but soon they began to cut their way down into the granite, while
along the crests of the ridges the more resistant rocks began to
stand out as jagged peaks.</p>
<p class="indent">
Thus Nature worked until the mountains promised before long to be
well worn down. The cañons had widened to valleys and the
rugged slopes had given place to gentle ones. Toward the northern
end of the range the work was even farther advanced, for the streams,
now choked with gravel and sand, flowed over broad flood plains.
In this gravel was buried a part of the wealth of California. The
rocks over which the streams flowed contained veins of quartz with
little particles of gold scattered through it, and as the surface
rock crumbled and was worn away, the gold, being much heavier,
slowly accumulated in the gravel at the bottom of the streams.
This gold amounted in value to hundreds of millions of dollars.</p>
<p class="indent">
The forces within the earth became active again. Apparently Nature
did not intend that the gold should be forever buried, or that the
country should always appear so uninteresting. Internal forces
raised the mountain block for a second time, tilting it still more
to the westward. Volcanoes broke forth along the summit of the
range near the line of fracture, and floods of lava and volcanic
mud ran down the slopes, completely filling the broad valleys of
the northern Sierras and burying a great part of the gold-bearing
gravel.</p>
<p class="indent">
The eruptions turned the streams from their channels, but on the
steeper slope of the mountains the rivers went energetically to
work making new beds. They cut down through the lava and the buried
gravel until they finally reached the solid rock underneath. Into
this rock, which we call "bed-rock," they have now worn cañons
two thousand feet deep. The beds of gravel that lay under the old
streams frequently form the tops of the hills between these deep
cañons. Here they are easily accessible to the miners, who
by tunnels or surface workings have taken out many millions of
dollars' worth of gold.</p>
<p class="indent">
The important cañons of the northern Sierras, where the
gold is found, have been made by the American and Feather rivers.
Farther south are the deeper and more rugged cañons of the
Tuolumne, Merced, King's, and Kern rivers, which open to us inviting
pathways into the mountains.</p>
<p class="indent">
It might be supposed that the mantle of snow and ice which at that
time covered most of the surface of the earth would have protected
it from further erosion, but this was not the case. In the basin
at the head of each stream the snow accumulated year after year
until it was more than a thousand feet deep. Under the influence
of the warm days and cold nights the snow slowly turned to ice,
and moved by its own weight, crept down into the cañons.
The solid rock walls were ground and polished, and even now, so
long a time after the glaciers have melted, some of these polished
surfaces still glisten in the sunlight. The glaciers deepened and
enlarged the cañons, but running water was the most important
agent in their making.</p>
<p class="indent">
Upon the disappearance of the glaciers, the streams went to work
again deepening their cañons. From their starting-points,
under the lofty crags, they first ran through broad upland valleys,
then tumbled into the cañons; but until they had reached
the lower mountain slopes, to which the glaciers had not extended,
they passed through a dreary and desolate region devoid of almost
every sign of life. The glaciers had swept away all the loose rock
and soil, and it was many long years before the surface again crumbled
so that forest trees could spread over it once more.</p>
<p class="indent">
The grandeur and attractiveness of the Yosemite is partly due to
the precipitous cliffs enclosing the valley, some of which are
nearly four thousand feet in height, partly to the high waterfalls,
and partly to the green meadows and forest groves through which
the Merced River winds.</p>
<p class="indent">
although the glaciers had little to do with the making of the Yosemite
Valley, yet they added to its attractiveness. The valley is situated
where a number of smaller streams join the Merced River. Erosion was
more rapid here because the granite was soft, while the vertical
seams in the rock gave the growing valley precipitous walls. When
the glacier came it pushed out the loose rocks and boulders, and
dropping a portion of them at the lower end, made a dam across
the Merced River. At first a shallow lake filled the valley, but
after a time the silt and gravel which the streams were continually
bringing in filled the lake, and formed marshy flats. Finally,
grasses and trees spread over these flats and gave the valley the
appearance which it has to-day.</p>
<p class="indent">
Besides the meadows, the glaciers gave us two of the waterfalls.
Yosemite Creek, which comes down over the walls twenty-seven hundred
feet in three successive falls, was turned into its present channel
by a dam which a glacier had left across its old course. A glacier
also turned the Merced River at its entrance to the main valley
so as to form the Nevada Fall.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 530px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig015.jpg" width-obs="530" height-obs="753" alt="Fig. 15">
FIG. 15.—THE CAÑON OF BUBB'S CREEK, A BRANCH OF THE KING'S
RIVER CAÑON</div>
<p class="indent">
After the valley had been made and clothed in vegetation, it was
discovered by a small tribe of Indians who came here to make their
home, secure from all their enemies. There were fish in the streams
and animals in the woods. The oaks supplied acorns, and in early
summer the meadows were covered with strawberries. Legends were
associated with many of the cliffs and waterfalls, for the Indians,
like ourselves, are impressed by the wonders of Nature.</p>
<p class="indent">
Hetch-Hetchy Valley, twenty-five miles north of the Yosemite, has
been formed upon much the same plan, but a portion of its floor is
marshy and there are few waterfalls. King's River Cañon has
no green meadows and no high waterfalls, while its great granite
walls are not so precipitous as those of the Yosemite. Next to the
Yosemite, in the wildness of its scenery, is Tehipite Cañon.
This cañon is situated upon the middle fork of King's River,
about a hundred miles south. For many miles its walls and domes
present ever changing views.</p>
<p class="indent">
A continual struggle is going on between the forces within the
earth and the sculptor working upon its surface. First one, then
the other, gains the advantage. Where the mountains are steep and
high, often the forces within have recently been active. Where
they are low and the slopes are gentle, the sculptor has long held
sway. She begins by making the surface as rough and picturesque
as possible, but after a time she destroys her own handiwork.</p>
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