<h2><SPAN name="page_075">THE HISTORY OF A COAST LINE</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
The story of our Pacific coast reads more like a tale from the
"Arabian Nights" than like a plain statement of events which have
actually happened.</p>
<p class="indent">
The meeting place of the land and ocean is not really so permanent
a line as it appears. The shore has been continually moving back
and forth throughout the long history of the earth. That which was
dry land at one time was at another time deeply buried beneath the
ocean. The Pacific border seems never to have been at rest. It has
risen and sunk again repeatedly. It has been squeezed, folded, and
broken, shaken by earthquakes, and disturbed by volcanic eruptions.</p>
<p class="indent">
One might be led to think from this statement that it would not
be safe to live on the Pacific coast, and that both animals and
men would shun the region. The fact is, however, that these changes
usually come to pass so very slowly that we are not aware of them.
Severe earthquakes and volcanic disturbances take place so rarely
in comparison with the length of a man's life, that we may pass our
whole lives without experiencing any of these violent disturbances.
The Pacific coast region, with its forest-covered mountains, fertile
valleys, and beautiful homes, presents so quiet and peaceful an
appearance that it is difficult to believe that parts of its history
have been so tumultuous.</p>
<p class="indent">
Perhaps you will ask how we can know so much about the past. It is
true that no one was here to witness the events which are supposed
to have taken place. But Nature has left a record of her doings
which we have only to see and understand in order to learn with
certainty many things which happened in the far distant past.</p>
<p class="indent">
Too many of us go through life seeing and understanding almost
as little of the world about us as if we were blind. Our early
ancestors were obliged to understand many things about Nature and
to cultivate clear and close observation for the sake of
self-preservation. The very life of the savage depends upon the
training of his eyes. He must be able to tell the meaning of a
distant object or an indistinct trail, for his enemies may have
passed that way recently. If we could bring the sharp eyes of the
savage to our aid, the world would mean much more to us.</p>
<p class="indent">
In order to learn something of the history of the Pacific shore
line, we must see what the waves are doing at the present time.
The projecting points of land are being worn away (Fig. 33). The
waves form the cliffs against which they beat, and sometimes, as
they eat their way slowly into the land, they cut off portions
and leave them standing alone as islands.</p>
<p class="indent">
The pebbles and boulders (Fig. 34) were once angular fragments
torn from the cliff. They have been washed about and hurled against
the solid rock until they have been worn smooth; and the cliff
in turn has had a cave ground out at its base. Above the lower
cave there is a remnant of a second one, with pebbles upon its
floor. This was made when the land stood ten feet lower than at
present.</p>
<p class="indent">
As the waves wear away the loose earth and the solid rock below
it, moving the cliffs inland, they leave a comparatively smooth
surface which is partly exposed at low tide. The fact that this
surface is not marked by stream channels, as is the land, helps
us to realize the great difference between the irregular surface
of the latter and the plain-like character of the ocean floor.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 515px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig033.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="316" alt="Fig. 33">
FIG. 33.—POINT BUCHON, CALIFORNIA
<p class="imgnote">The waves are eating their way into the land</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
Along the whole coast of California there are many old sea beaches
and cliffs which the waves abandoned long ago. The highest of these
beaches lies so far up the slopes of the mountains bordering the
ocean that it makes us wonder what the geography of California
could have been like when the region was so deeply submerged.</p>
<p class="indent">
The lowest and newest terrace is the one shown in Fig. 35, ten
feet above the ocean. Each succeeding terrace is less distinct,
and the highest, fourteen hundred feet in elevation, can now be
distinguished in only a few places. Where the old sea cliffs are
best preserved they form a series of broad, flat steps, rising one
above the other. Each bench, or terrace as it is commonly called,
is a part of an old plain cut out of the land by the waves when the
ocean stood at that level. The steeper slope rising at the back is
the remnant of the cliff against which the waves used to beat. If
we are fortunate, we shall find at its base some water-worn pebbles
and possibly a few fragments of sea-shells. The crumbling of the
rocks and the erosive action of the rills are fast destroying the
old cliffs, so that in many places they have entirely disappeared.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 516px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig034.jpg" width-obs="516" height-obs="338" alt="Fig. 34">
FIG. 34.—OCEAN CAVE AT LOW TIDE
<p class="imgnote">Pebbles of a former beach are seen above</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
Upon the seaward face of San Pedro Hill, in southern California,
there are eleven terraces, rising to a height of twelve hundred
feet. What an interesting record this shows! Long ago the land
stood twelve hundred feet lower than at present, and the waves beat
about San Pedro Hill, nearly submerging it. Then the land began
to rise, but stopped after a time, and the waves cut a terrace. The
upward movement was continued, with repeated intervals of rest,
until the land stood higher than it does now.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 515px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig035.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="356" alt="Fig. 35">
FIG. 35.—WAVE-CUT TERRACES
<p class="imgnote">Point San Pedro, California</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
North of San Francisco there stands a terrace fourteen hundred feet
above the ocean. Numerous terraces appear along the Oregon coast,
but those in Washington are not as high as those in California. It is
probable that the land in this region was not so deeply submerged.</p>
<p class="indent">
The ancient shore lines of British Columbia and Alaska are now
deeply buried beneath the ocean, as those of California once were.
The fiords, so common in these countries, are old river valleys
which have been drowned by the sinking of the land. The islands
were once portions of the coast mountains, but have been cut off
by the same process.</p>
<p class="indent">
Let us picture in our minds the changes in the geography of the
Pacific coast of the United States which must have been made by a
sinking of the land to a depth of only six hundred feet. We will
begin upon the north, at the Strait of Fuca.</p>
<p class="indent">
Puget Sound once opened to the south as well as to the north, so
that the Olympic Mountains formed an island. The broad and fertile
Willamette Valley was but an arm of the sea, somewhat like Puget
Sound to-day. The body of water which once filled this valley has
been called Willamette Sound. The ocean overspread the low Oregon
coast, and reached far up the valleys of the Umpqua and Rogue rivers.
But the boundaries of the Klamath Mountains were not greatly changed,
for in many places they rise quite abruptly from the present shore
line.</p>
<p class="indent">
All the large valleys of California were flooded, including the
San Joaquin-Sacramento valley, which was then a great sound, open
to the ocean in the region of the present Strait of Carquinez.
The Coast range was broken up into islands and peninsulas. The
islands off the coast of southern California are high and therefore
were not entirely submerged. The Gulf of California spread over the
Colorado Desert, while from the west the water penetrated inland
over the plain of Los Angeles to a point beyond San Bernardino, so
that at the San Gorgonio pass only a narrow neck of land connected
the San Jacinto Mountains and the Peninsula Range with the mainland.</p>
<p class="indent">
If California had been inhabited at this time, the state would
not have been noted for orchards and grain-fields, but rather for
its mineral wealth. There would have been comparatively little
low land fit for cultivation, but the mountains, where almost all
the precious metals are found, would have appeared nearly as they
do to-day.</p>
<p class="indent">
The surface of the earth may be divided into the ocean basins and
the continental masses which rise above them, but we must not make
the mistake of thinking that the shore line always corresponds
with the border of the continental masses. We have learned that
the land is almost always moving slowly up or down, so that the
shore is continually changing back and forth. At one time the shore
line may be far within the borders of the continent, as we have
seen was once the case upon our Pacific coast; at another time,
if the land should rise, the shore line might coincide with the
real border of the continent. By the real border of the continent
we mean the line along which the earth slopes down steeply to the
abysmal depths of the ocean.</p>
<p class="indent">
It is an interesting fact that outside the present shore line of
California there is a submerged strip of the continent varying
from ten to one hundred and fifty miles in width. This strip of
land is like a bench upon the side of the continent, and is known as
the continental plateau. The water over the plateau is comparatively
shallow. Upon one side the land rises, while upon the other there is
a rapid descent into the deep Pacific. The surface of the plateau
is in general fairly smooth, but in places mountains lift their
summits above the water and form islands.</p>
<p class="indent">
There was a time, thousands of years earlier than the period when
California was so nearly covered by the waters of the Pacific, when
this land stood far higher than it does now. The coast line was
then much farther west, near the border of the submarine plateau.
The Santa Barbara Islands at that time formed a mountain range upon
the edge of the continental land. This fact was established by
the discovery upon one of the islands of a large number of bones
of an extinct American elephant. These animals could have reached
the submerged mountains only at a time when there was dry land
between them and the present shore line. We should like to know how
it came about that these bones were left where they are. Perhaps
the land sank so suddenly that the water cut the elephants off from
the mainland and compelled them to spend the remainder of their
lives upon these islands.</p>
<p class="indent">
While the land stood so high, some of the larger streams wore deep
channels across what is now the submarine plateau. These channels
have been discovered by soundings made from the ships of the United
States Coast Survey. The largest of the submerged valleys extends
through the Bay of Monterey, and runs so close to the shore that
it has offered a favorable location for a wharf.</p>
<p class="indent">
Before the buried valleys upon the northern coast of California
were all known, the presence of one of them led to the wreck of
a ship. The shore was obscured by fog, but the soundings made by
the sailors showed deep water and led them to believe they were
a long distance from land, when suddenly the ship drifted in upon
the rocks.</p>
<p class="indent">
The last significant movement of the land of the Pacific border
was a downward one. It flooded the mouths of the streams and formed
all the large harbors which are of so great commercial importance.</p>
<p class="indent">
San Francisco Bay occupies a great stretch of lowland at the meeting
of several valleys of the Coast Ranges and forms the outlet for
the most important drainage system of California. If this region
had been settled before the subsidence of the land which let in the
ocean through the Golden Gate, how the farmers would have lamented
the flooding of their fertile lands! But we can understand how
small the loss would have been, compared with the advantages to
be gained from the magnificent harbor which now exists here. If
the land had not sunk the history of the Pacific coast would have
been far different.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 511px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig036.jpg" width-obs="511" height-obs="307" alt="Fig. 36">
FIG. 36.—ISLAND ROUNDED BY A GLACIER
<p class="imgnote">Near Anacortes, Puget Sound</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
Puget Sound, another very important arm of the ocean, is also a
submerged valley, but it has had an entirely different history
from that of San Francisco Bay. The valley was at one time occupied
by a great glacier which came down from the Cascade Range and moved
northwest through the sound and into the Strait of Juan de Fuca,
scouring and polishing the rocks over which it passed. A little
island near Anacortes (Fig. 36) has been rounded by the action
of the ice into a form like a whale's back.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 512px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig037.jpg" width-obs="512" height-obs="354" alt="Fig. 37">
FIG. 37.—AN ABANDONED OCEAN CLIFF
<p class="imgnote">Southern California</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
The sinking of the land flooded the lower Columbia River and the
mouth of the Willamette, so that ocean ships may now go up as far
as Portland. The currents and waves soon threw up bars across the
mouths of the smaller streams, and formed lagoons behind them.
Ships frequently have difficulty in entering many of the harbors
because of the sand bars which have been built up part way to the
surface of the water.</p>
<p class="indent">
It is thought that along some portions of the coast there has recently
been a slight upward movement of the land. Figure 37 shows a bit of
California coast, near San Juan, where the Santa Fé railroad
has laid its tracks for several miles along a strip of abandoned
beach, at the base of a cliff against which the waves once beat.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 510px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig038.jpg" width-obs="510" height-obs="320" alt="Fig. 38">
FIG. 38.—LIMESTONE CLIFF, QUATSINO SOUND, VANCOUVER ISLAND</div>
<p class="indent">
At the northern end of Vancouver island there is a deep arm of
the ocean called Quatsino Sound. A limestone cliff upon the shore
of this sound (Fig. 38) has been undermined by the dissolving of
the limestone, but now the water lacks three feet of rising to
the notch which it recently formed.</p>
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