Slide 228

The Sierras, from Glacier Rock, Yosemite Valley, Cal.

Drawer 5



Negative Number: 5022

Latitude: 38.0

Longitude: 120.0

Geographical Classification:
North America: United States and Possessions (Except Asiatic Possessions): Pacific States: California

Card Front:

The Sierra Nevada Mountains extend north and south through the entire length of California. They contain the highest peaks in the United States, outside of Alaska. Mount Whitney is 14,502 feet high. Lassen Peak is the only active volcano on the mainland of our country. Many fo the peaks of the Sierra Nevadas are covered with ice and snow the year round. That is why they were given this name, which means "snowy range". In some places the lower parts of the mountains have been cleated of their trees and are used for farm land. In other parts the great forest trees still remain. The Yosemite Valley is a small strip that extends through Yosemite National Park for a distance of about 7 miles in length and less than a mile in width. It looks like a great crack in the rocks of the Sierra Nevadas, with a flat level

Card Back:

floor, and steep, overhanging walls of granite rock on either side. Down these rocky walls, many beautiful water-falls tumble. It is here that we find the highest water-fall in the world, Yosemite Falls. The Upper Fall is 1,430 feet high, nine times as high as Niagara Falls. The Lower Fall is 320 feet. This makes the entire distance from the crest to the river, half a mile. Bridal Veil Falls is only 620 feet high. But nowhere in the world is there another such a scene as this. It plunges straight down its precipice in a white, frothy sheet. When it reaches the bottom, its sprays spread out in what looks like the graceful folds of a huge, soft, filmy bridal veil. Thus it gets its name. Another of the wonderful falls here is the Ribbon Falls. This sheet of water drops a distance of 1,612 feet, or 10 times the height of Niagara Falls.