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Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Great Basin National Park is home to 13,063-foot glacier-carved Wheeler Peak, 5,000-year-old bristlecone pines, the beautiful Lehman Caves (formerly a National Monument, now part of the National Park), and the six-story-high Lexington Arch, a rare, above-ground limestone arch.

When I was growing up, I was taught that the Great Basin was a vast, barren desert. All the precipitation that occurs in the Great Basin either evaporates, sinks into the ground or flows into local (mostly saline) lakes. No water leaves this region and flows to the ocean. Pyramid Lake, the Humboldt Sink and Great Salt Lake are some of the larger "drains" in this 200,000 square mile area that covers most of Nevada, half of Utah and sections of Califonia, Oregon, Idaho, and Wyoming. Great Basin National Park preserves a small concentration of some of the "best" representative features of the larger "Great Basin Region."

White Pine County (the home of Great Basin National Park) has some of the most famous ghost towns in Nevada. At one time, this area was filled with gold and silver mining camps. About the same time as the first miners came sheepherders, cattle ranchers, farmers, and Mormon pioneers. Before them were thousands of years of Native Americans using the area seasonally for hunting and gathering. The Fremont people left the remains of a small "town" near Baker (in the early 1990's, it was excavated, catalogued and then back-filled to protect the site). The Fremont inhabited the Snake Valley from about 1000 to about 1300 CE. They also left a number of "pictographs" (painted rock art) in which the colors are still bright and vibrant.

The Johnson Lake Historic Mining District surrounds the remains of the Johnson Lake Mine, a tungsten discovery that played a large part in World War I (tungsten from here was used to harden the steel that tanks, cannons and other military ordnance was made of).

The rock glacier in the cirque beneath Wheeler Peak is the only glacier in Nevada, the last remnant of the great continental ice sheets that covered a large part of the world during the last Ice Age (some 10,000 years ago). If the current predicted warming trends continue, this glacier will disappear in less than 20 years.

I was last at Great Basin National Park in 1990 and I stayed for one night. Next time I need to stay longer. And I understand the trail to the top of Wheeler Peak is in much better shape now than it was back then...

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