Steep Trails - California - Utah - Nevada - Washington - Oregon - The Grand Canyon By John Muir












































































































































 -   Here is found what is called the heavy timber, but
the tallest and most fully developed sections of the forests - Page 133
Steep Trails - California - Utah - Nevada - Washington - Oregon - The Grand Canyon By John Muir - Page 133 of 304 - First - Home

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Here Is Found What Is Called The Heavy Timber, But The Tallest And Most Fully Developed Sections Of The Forests,

Growing down in sheltered hollows on moist moraines, would be regarded in California only as groves of saplings, and so,

Relatively, they are, for by careful calculation we find that more than a thousand of these trees would be required to furnish as much timber as may be obtained from a single specimen of our Sierra giants.

The height of the timberline in eastern Nevada, near the middle of the Great Basin, is about eleven thousand feet above sea level; consequently the forests, in a dwarfed, storm-beaten condition, pass over the summits of nearly every range in the State, broken here and there only by mechanical conditions of the surface rocks. Only three mountains in the State have as yet come under my observation whose summits rise distinctly above the treeline. These are Wheeler's Peak, twelve thousand three hundred feet high, Mount Moriah, about twelve thousand feet, and Granite Mountain, about the same height, all of which are situated near the boundary line between Nevada and Utah Territory.

In a rambling mountaineering journey of eighteen hundred miles across the state, I have met nine species of coniferous trees, - four pines, two spruces, two junipers, and one fir, - about one third the number found in California. By far the most abundant and interesting of these is the Pinus Fremontiana,[18] or nut pine. In the number of individual trees and extent of range this curious little conifer surpasses all the others combined.

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