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See also: area in the western Cordilleran region of the See also: United States of See also: America, about 200,000 sq. m. in extent, characterized by wholly interior drainage, a See also: peculiar See also: mountain See also: system and extreme aridity
.
Its See also: form is approximately that of an isosceles triangle, with the See also: sharp angle extending into See also: Lower California, W. of the See also: Colorado See also: river; the See also: northern edge being formed by the See also: divide of the drainage See also: basin of the See also: Columbia river, the eastern by that of the Colorado, the western by the central See also: part of the Sierra See also: Nevada crest, and by other high mountains
.
The N. boundary and much of the E. is not conspicuously uplifted, being See also: plateau, rather than mountain
.
The W. See also: half of See also: Utah, the S.W. corner of See also: Wyoming, the S.E. corner of See also: Idaho, a large area in S.E
.
See also: Oregon, much of S
.
California, a See also: strip along the E. border of the last-named See also: state, and almost the whole of Nevada are embraced within the limits of the See also: Great Basin
.
The Great Basin is not, as its name implies, a topographic cup
.
Its See also: surface is of varied character, with many See also: independent closed basins draining into lakes or " playas," none of which, however, has outlet to the See also: sea
.
The mountain chains, which from their peculiar geologic character are known as of the " Basin Range type " (not exactly conterminous in distribution with the Basin), are echeloned in See also: short ranges See also: running from N. to S
.
Many of them are fault See also: block mountains, the crust having been broken and the blocks tilted so that there is a steep face on one See also: side and a gentle slope on the other
.
This is the Basin Range type of mountain
.
These mountains are among the most See also: recent in the continent, and some of them, at least, are still growing
.
In numerous instances clear evidence of recent movements along the fault planes has been discovered; and frequent earthquakes testify with equal force to theSee also: present uplift of the mountain blocks
.
The valleys between the tilted mountain blocks are smooth and often trough-like, and are often the sites of shallow See also: salt lakes or playas
.
By the rain See also: wash and See also: wind See also: action detritus from the mountains is carried to these valley floors, raising their level, and often burying low mountain spurs, so as to cause neighbouring valleys to coalesce
.
The plateau " lowlands " in the centre of the Basin are approximately 5000 ft. in altitude
.
Southward the altitude falls, See also: Death valley and See also: Coahuila valley being in part below the level of the sea
.
The whole Basin is marked by three features of elevation—the Utah basin, the Nevada basin and, between them, the Nevada plateau
.
Over the lowlands of the Basin, taken generally, there is an See also: average precipitation of perhaps 6-7 in., while in the Oregon region it is twice as great, and in the See also: southern parts even less
.
The mountains receive somewhat more
.
The See also: annual evaporation from See also: water surfaces is from 6o to 150 in
.
(6o to 8o on the Great Salt Lake)
.
The reason for the arid See also: climate differs in different sections
.
In the See also: north it is due to the fact that the winds from the Pacific lose most of their moisture, especially in winter, on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada; in the See also: south it is due to the fact that the region lies in a zone of calms, and See also: light, variable winds
.
Precipitation is largely confined to See also: local showers, often of such violence as to warrant the name " cloud bursts," commonly applied to the heavy down-pours of this See also: desert region
.
It is these heavy rains, of brief duration, when great volumes of water rapidly run off from the barren slopes, that cause the deep channels, or arroyas, which cros's the desert
.
Permanent streams are rare
.
Many mountains are quite without perennial streams, and some lack even springs
.
Few of the mountain creeks succeed in reaching the arid plains, and those that do quickly disappear by evaporation or by seepage into the gravels
.
In the N.W. there are many permanent lakes without outlet fed by the mountain streams; others, snow fed, occur among the Sierra Nevada; and some in the larger mountain masses of the See also: middle region
.
Almost all are saline
.
The largest
of all, Great Salt Lake, is maintained by the See also: waters of the Wasatch and associated plateaus
.
No lakes occur south of See also: Owens in the W. and See also: Sevier in the E
.
(390); evaporation below these limits is supreme
.
Most of the small closed basins, how-ever, contain " playas," or See also: alkali mud flats, that are overflowed when the tributary streams are supplied with. See also: storm water
.
Save where irrigation has reclaimed small areas, the whole region is a vast desert, though locally only some of the interior plains are known as " deserts." Such are the Great Salt Lake and Carson deserts in the north, the Mohave and Colorado and Amargosa (Death Valley) deserts of the south-west
.
Straggling forests, mainly of conifers, characterize the high plateaus of central Utah . The lowlands and the lower mountains, especially southward, are generally treeless . Cottonwoods See also: line the streams, salt-loving vegetation margins the See also: bare playas, low bushes and scattered bunch-grass grow over the lowlands, especially in the north
.
See also: Gray desert
See also: plants, notably cactuses and other thorny plants, partly replace in the south the bushes of the north
.
Except on the scattered oases, where irrigation from springs and mountain streams has reclaimed small patches, the desert is barren and forbidding in the extreme
.
There are broad plains covered with salt and alkali, and others supporting only scattered bunch grass, See also: sage See also: bush, See also: cactus and other arid See also: land plants
.
There are stony wastes, or alluvial fans, where mountain streams emerge upon the plains, in See also: time of See also: flood, bringing detritus in their torrential courses from the mountain canyons and depositing it along the mountain See also: base
.
The barrenness extends into the mountains themselves, where there are bare See also: rock cliffs, stony slopes and a general See also: absence of vegetation
.
With increasing altitude vegetation becomes more varied and abundant, until the See also: tree limit is reached; then follows a See also: forest See also: belt, which in the highest mountains is limited above by cold as it is below by aridity
.
The successive explorations of B
.
L
.
E
.
See also: Bonneville, J
.
C
.
Fremont and See also: Howard Stansbury (1806–1863) furnished a general knowledge of the hydrographic features and See also: geological lacustrine See also: history of the Great Basin, and this knowledge was rounded out by the See also: field
See also: work of the U.S
.
Geological Survey from 1899 to 1883, under the direction of See also: Grove Karl
See also: Gilbert
.
The mountains are composed in great part of Paleozoic strata, often modified by vulcanism and greatly denuded and sculptured by wind and water erosion
.
The climate in
See also: late geologic time was very different from that which prevails to-See also: day
.
In the See also: Pleistocene See also: period many large lakes were formed within the Great Basin; especially, by the See also: fusion of small catchment basins, two great confluent bodies of water—Lake Lahontan (in the Nevada basin) and Lake Bonneville (in the Utah basin)
.
The latter, the remnants of which are represented to-day by Great Salt, Sevier and Utah Lakes, had a drainage basin of some 54,000 sq
.
M
.
See G
.
K
.
Gilbert in Wheeler Survey, U.S
.
See also: Geographical Survey West of the Hundredth Meridian, vol. iii.; See also: Clarence See also: King and others in the Report of the Fortieth Parallel Survey (U.S
.
Geol
.
Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel) ; G
.
K
.
Gilbert's Lake Bonneville (U.S
.
Geological Survey, Monographs, No
.
1, 1890), also I
.
C
.
See also: Russell's Lake Lahontan (Same, No
.
I 1, 1885), with references to other publications of the Survey
.
For reference to later geological literature, and discussion of the Basin Ranges, see J
.
E
.
Spurr, Bull . Geol .See also: Soc
.
Amer. vol
.
12, 1901, p
.
217; and G
.
D
.
Louderback, same, vol
.
15, 1904, p
.
280; also general See also: bibliographies issued by the U.S
.
Geol
.
Survey (e.g
.
Bull . 301, 372 and 409) . |
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