Deserts of California

Coachella Valley Preserve, in the Colorado Desert

The Deserts of California have unique ecosystems and habitats, a sociocultural and historical "Old West" collection of legends, districts, and communities, and they also form a popular tourism region of dramatic natural features and recreational development. All of the deserts are located in eastern Southern California, in the Western United States.

Geography

Largest desert cities
City Population
Lancaster 156,633
Palmdale 152,750
Victorville 115,903
Hesperia 90,173
Indio 76,036
Apple Valley 69,135
Cathedral City 51,200
Palm Desert 48,445
Palm Springs 44,552
El Centro 42,598
Coachella 40,704
Calexico 38,572
La Quinta 37,467
Adelanto 31,765
Ridgecrest 27,616
Desert Hot Springs 25,938
Twentynine Palms 25,048

There are three main deserts in California: the Mojave Desert, the Colorado Desert, and the Great Basin desert.[1]:408 The Mojave Desert is bounded by the Tehachapi Mountains on the northwest, the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains on the south, and extends eastward to California's borders with Arizona and Nevada; it also forms portions of northwest Arizona. The Colorado Desert lies in the southeastern corner of the state, between the Colorado River and the Transverse Ranges, and continues into Mexico and Arizona to the south and east, (as the named Sonoran Desert). The Great Basin desert lies immediately to the east of the Sierra Nevada cordillera and extends eastward into the state of Nevada.

The deserts encompass all of Imperial County, the southern and eastern portion of Inyo County, the eastern portions of Mono County, Los Angeles County, Kern County, San Diego County, and Riverside County, and most of northern and eastern San Bernardino County. The major urban populations of western San Diego County, Orange County, the Inland Empire, and Greater Los Angeles are over the high mountains toward the Pacific Ocean.

Mojave Desert

Main article: Mojave Desert

The topographical boundaries include the Tehachapi Mountains to the northwest, together with the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountain ranges to the south. The mountain boundaries are quite distinct since they are outlined by the two largest faults in California the San Andreas Fault and the Garlock Fault.[1]:411 The Mojave Desert in California includes the colloquially-defined High Desert region. The Great Basin shrub steppe lies to the north of the Mojave Desert; the warmer Sonoran Desert and its subregion the Colorado Desert lie to the south and east.

Desert landscape in the Mojave Desert

Colorado Desert

Main articles: Colorado Desert and Sonoran Desert

The Colorado Desert is a northwesterly part of the larger Sonoran Desert, which extends across southwest North America. The Colorado Desert region encompasses approximately 7 million acres (2,800,000 ha), reaching from the Northwest Mexico border region in the south to the higher-elevation Mojave Desert in the north and from the Colorado River in the east to the Laguna Mountains of the Peninsular Ranges in the west. The area includes the heavily irrigated Coachella, Palo Verde, and Imperial Valleys. The Sonoran/Colorado Desert in California includes the colloquially-defined Low Desert region.

Great Basin Desert

Main article: Great Basin Desert

The Great Basin Desert is the only "cold" desert in the country, where most precipitation falls in the form of snow. The Great Basin Desert exists because of the "rainshadow effect" created by the Sierra Nevada of eastern California. When prevailing winds from the Pacific Ocean rise to go over the Sierra, the air cools and loses most of its moisture as rain. By the time the winds cross over the mountains and sweep down the far side, they are very dry and absorb moisture from the surrounding area. This drying effect is responsible for creating the Great Basin Desert.[2]

Ecology and climate

All of the deserts of California are characterized by low rainfall, caused by the rain shadow of mountain ranges to the west of each desert. The Mojave Desert receives between 3 to 10 inches (76 to 254 mm) of rain per year, while the Colorado Desert receives between 2 to 6 inches (51 to 152 mm).[3] The driest spot in California is Death Valley, which averages 1.5 inches (38 mm) of precipitation per year.[1]:406 The soils of California deserts also tends to be alkaline, which adds to the stress of drought on plants.[1]:408

Joshua trees are characteristic of the Mojave Desert

The Mojave Desert is considered a high desert, because elevations can range up to 11,000 feet (3,400 m).[3] The Mojave Desert is characterized by the presence of Yucca brevifolia, the Joshua Tree, which as an indicator species of the Mojave Desert, extends southeasterly into Mohave County, Arizona, and even further, all parts of northwest Arizona. Other common plants of the Mojave Desert include creosote bush, blackbrush, greasewood and saltbush. Higher elevations host Western juniper and Pinyon pine.[3]

The Colorado Desert is a low desert, with elevations running from −230 to 1,000 feet (−70 to 305 m) above sea level.[3] Unlike the other California deserts, the Colorado Desert gets significant rain from the North American Monsoon in August and September.[1]:413 The Colorado Desert hosts saguaro cactus, Sonoran creosote bush, and Salton Sea saltbush.[3]

The Great Basin desert in California can also reach up to 11,000 feet (3,400 m) of elevation.[4] Plants in the Great Basin Desert are well adapted to the harsh conditions. These plants include Big sagebrush, Pinyon pine, Utah juniper, Low sagebrush, Shadscale, and Bristlecone pine.[4] Sagebrush, a very common resident of the Great Basin, is well adapted to the area. The Big sagebrush root system can extend as much as 90 feet in circumference. This adaptation allows the plant to catch as much water as possible when the rains do come. Mormon tea possesses modified leaves. The leaves are very small and are not the primary area for photosynthesis. The chlorophyll filled stems carry out the primary photosynthesis. Four-wing saltbush excretes salt through its leaves to prevent build-up of lethal salts in the plant. The plants on the alkaline flats have a high internal concentration of salt and are able to extract water other plants can not.[5]

Common animals of the California deserts include the desert bighorn sheep, desert kit fox, coyote, spotted skunk, spotted bat, black-tailed jackrabbit, ground squirrels, kangaroo rat, white-footed mouse, and desert tortoise.[3]

History

Before the European exploration of North America, tribes of Native Americans, such as the Mohave (in the Mojave desert), the Chemehuevi (in the Great Basin desert), and the Quechan (in the Colorado desert) were hunter-gatherers living in the California deserts.[6]

European explorers started exploring the deserts beginning in the 18th century. Francisco Garcés, a Franciscan friar, was the first explorer of the Colorado and Mojave deserts in 1776.[7] Garcés recorded information about the original inhabitants of the deserts.

Later, as American interests expanded into California, American explorers started probing the California deserts. Jedediah Smith travelled through the Great Basin and Mojave deserts in 1826, finally reaching the San Gabriel Mission.[8][9] John C. Frémont explored the Great Basin, proving that water did not flow out of it to the ocean, and provided maps that the forty-niners used to get to California.[10]

The California Gold Rush jumpstarted economic activity in the California deserts. Mining for silver, gold, and lead became important in both the Mojave and the Great Basin deserts.[11] Mining stimulated the creation of transportation systems, such as the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad.[12]

Tourism

Badwater Basin elevation sign

In 1994, the California Desert Protection Act protected millions of acres within the Death Valley and Joshua Tree National Parks and the Mojave National Preserve.[13] Within these parks and preserves, visitors can view unique landscapes, plants, and animals. Badwater Basin, the lowest point in the United States lies within Death Valley National Park.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Schoenherr, Allan A. (1992). A Natural History of California. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-06922-6.
  2.  This article incorporates public domain material from the National Park Service document "Great Basin National Park - Deserts".
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "American Semi-Desert and Desert". Ecological Subregions of the United States. US Forest Service.
  4. 1 2 "Southeastern Great Basin". Ecological Subregions of California. US Forest Service.
  5.  This article incorporates public domain material from the National Park Service document "Great Basin National Park - Plants".
  6. "History & Culture". Mojave National Preserve. National Park Service.
  7. "Fr. Francisco Garces". Profiles in Mojave Desert History. Digital-Desert.
  8. Gilbert, Bil (1973). The Trailblazers. Time-Life Books. pp. 96–100, 107.
  9. Smith, Alson J. (1965). Men Against the Mountains: Jedediah Smith and the South West Expedition of 1826–1829. New York: John Day Co.
  10. Weiss, Stephen C. (May 1999). "The John C. Fremont '1842, 1843–'44 Report' and Map". Journal of Government Information. 26 (3): 297–313.
  11. Norris, Robert M.; Webb, Robert W. (1990). Geology of California. New York: Wiley. pp. 211–2,248.
  12. Hildebrand, GH (1982). Borax Pioneer: Francis Marion Smith. San Diego: Howell-North Books. ISBN 0-8310-7148-6.
  13. "California Desert Conservation". CaliforniaDesert.gov. Archived from the original on 2011-02-13.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for California Desert.
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