+ raga a cee be ; > ti ine ite sai Wished to Sinatra be DARA tht ci hls RE yA) Sed dof THE DESERT (cay) ser EVE coal | aa =” zEyy Si THE DESERT FURTHER STUDIES IN NATURAL APPEARANCES we JOHN C)*VAN DYKE AUTHOR OF ‘‘ NATURE FOR ITS OWN SAKE,” - ART FOR ART’S SAKE,” ETC., ETC. SECOND EDITION NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS 1902 F736 V4 1402 COPYRIGHT, 1901, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS Published September, 1901. “ao Yo hep +e te TROW DIRECTORY PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY, NEW YORK EL ee ee eee PREFACE-DEDICATION To A. M. C. After the making of Eden came a serpent, and after the gorgeous furnishing of the world, a human being. Why the existence of the de- stroyers ? What monstrous folly, think you, ever led Nature to create her one great enemy —man! Before his coming security may have been ; but how soon she learned the meaning of fear when this new Cidipus of her brood was brought forth! And.how instinctively she taught the fear of him to the,rest of her chil- dren! ‘To-day, after centuries of association, every bird and beast and creeping thing—the wolf in the forest, the antelope on the plain, the wild fowl in the sedge—fly from his ap- proach. They know his civilization means their destruction. Even the grizzly, secure in the chaparral of his mountain home, flinches as he crosses the white man’s trail. The boot mark Vil viii PREFACE-—DEDICATION in the dust smells of blood and iron. The great annihilator has come and fear travels with him. ‘* Familiar facts,” you will say. Yes; and not unfamiliar the knowledge that with the coming of civilization the grasses and the wild flowers perish, the forest falls and its place is taken by brambles, the mountains are blasted in the search for minerals, the plains are broken by the plow and the soil is gradually washed into the rivers. Last of all, when the forests have gone the rains cease falling, the streams dry up, the ground parches and yields no life, and the artificial desert—the desert made by the tramp of human feet—begins to show itself, Yes; everyone must have cast a backward glance and seen Nature’s beauties beaten to ashes under the successive marches of civilization. The older portions of the earth show their desolation plainly enough, and the ascending smoke and dust of the rnin have even tainted the air and dimmed the sunlight. Indeed, I am not speaking figuratively or extravagantly. We have often heard of “‘ Sunny Italy” or the “clear light” of Egypt, but be- lieve me there is no sunlight there compared with that which falls upon the upper peaks of PREFACE—DEDICATION ix the Sierra Madre or the uninhabitable wastes of the Colorado Desert. Pure sunlight requires for its existence pure air, and the Old World has little of it left. When you are in Rome again and stand upon that hill where all good roman- ticists go at sunset, look out and notice how dense is the atmosphere between you and St. Peter’s dome. That same thick air is all over Europe, all around the Mediterranean, even over in Mesopotamia and by the banks of the Ganges. It has been breathed and burned and battle-smoked for ten thousand years. Ride up and over the high table-lands of Montana—one can still ride there for days without seeing a trace of hnmanity—and how clear and scentless, how absolutely intangible that sky-blown sun- shot atmosphere! You breathe it without feel- ing it, you see through it a hundred miles and the picture is not blurred by it. It is just so with Nature’s color. ‘True enough, there is much rich color at Venice, at Cairo, at Constantinople. Its beauty need not be denied ; and yet it is an artificial, a chemical color, caused by the disintegration of matter— the decay of stone, wood, and iron torn from the neighboring mountains. It is Nature after a poor fashion—Nature subordinated to the will x PREFACE—DEDICATION of man. Once more ride over the enchanted mesas of Arizona at sunrise or at sunset, with the ragged mountains of Mexico to the south of you and the broken spurs of the great sierra round about you; and all the glory of the old shall be as nothing to the gold and purple and burning crimson of this new world. You will not be surprised then if, in speaking of desert, mesa and mountain I once more take you far beyond the wire fence of civilization to those places (unhappily few now) where the trail is unbroken and the mountain peak un- blazed. I was never over-fond of park and garden nature-study. If we would know the great truths we must seek them at the source. The sandy wastes, the arid lands, the porphyry mountain peaks may be thought profitless places for pilgrimages ; but how often have you and I, and that one we both loved so much, found beauty in neglected marshes, in wintry forests, and in barren hill-sides! The love of Nature is after all an acquired taste. One be- gins by admiring the Hudson-River landscape and ends by loving the desolation of Sahara. Just why or how the change would be difficult to explain. You cannot always dissect a taste or a passion. Nor can you pin Nature to a PREFACE—DEDICATION xi board and chart her beauties with square and compasses. One can give his impression and but little more. Perhaps I can tell you some- thing of what I have seen in these two years of wandering; but I shall never be able to tell you the grandeur of these mountains, nor the glory of color that wraps the burning sands at their feet. We shoot arrows at the sun in vain; yet still we shoot. And so it is that my book is only an excuse for talking about the beautiful things in this desert world that stretches down the Pacific Coast, and across Arizona and Sonora. The desert has gone a-begging for a word of praise these many years. It never had a sacred poet ; it has in me only alover. ButI trust that you, and the nature-loving public you represent, will accept this record of the Colorado and the Mojave as at least truthful. Given the facts perhaps the poet with his fancies will come hereafter. JOHN ©. VAN DYKE. La Noria VERDE Fresrvary, 1901. CONTENTS Cuarrer I. Zhe Approach.—Desert mountain ranges —Early morning approach—Air illusions—Sand forms— The winds—Sun-shafts—Sunlight—Desert life—Ante- lope—The Lost Mountains—The ascent—Deer trails— Footprints—The stone path—Defensive walls—The sum- mit—The fortified camp—Nature’s reclamations—The mountain dwellers—Invading hosts—Water and food supplies—The aborigines—Historic periods—The open desert—Perception of beauty—Sense of beauty—Moun- tain ‘‘ view” of the desert—Desert colors—The land of fire—Drouth and heat—Sand and gypsum—Sand-whirls— Desert storms—Drift of sands—Winter cold in the basin —Snow on desert—Sea and sand—Grim desolation—Love for the desert—The descent—The Padres in the desert— The light of the cross—Aboriginal faith........... Bap Cuarter II. The Make of the Desert.—The sea of sand—Mountain ranges on desert—Plains, valleys, and mesas—Effect of drouth—The rains—Harshness of des- ert—A gaunt land—Conditions of life—Incessant strife —Elemental warfare — Desert vegetation — Protruding edges—Shifting sands—Desert winds—Radiation of heat —Prevailing winds—Wear of the winds—Erosion of mountains — Rock-cutting—Fantastic forms—Wash-outs —Sand-lines in caves—Cloud-bursts—Canyon waters— Desert floods— Power of water— Water-pockets — No xiii Xiv CONTENTS surface-streams— Oases in the waste — Catch-basins — Old sea-beds—Volcanic action—Lava-flows—Geologica? ages—Kinds of rock—Glaciers—Land slips—Movement of stones—The talus—Stages of the talus—Desert floors —Sandstone blocks—Salt-beds—Sand-beds— Mountain vegetation—Withered grasses—Barren rock—Mountain colors—Saw-toothed ridges—Seen from the peaks—The Sun-fire kingdom..... wales es m'asoe wha ial ie teabatee gcrate en ae 23 CuapteR III The Bottom of the Bowl.—Early geo- logical days—The former Gulf—Sea-beaches on desert— Harbors and reefs—Indian remains—The Cocopas—The Colorado River—The delta dam—The inland lake—The first fall—Springs and wells in the sea-bed—The New River—New beaches—The second fall—The third beach —The failing water—Evaporation—Bottom of the Bowl —Drying out of the sea-bed—Advance of the desert—Be- low sea-level—Desolation of the basin—Beauty of the sand-dunes — Cactus and salt-bush — Desert animals— Birds—Lizards and snakes—Mirage—The water illusion —Decorative landscapes—Sensuous qualities in Nature —Changing the desert—Irrigation in the basin—Changing the climate—Dry air—Value of the air supply—Value of the desert—Destruction of natural beauty—Effects of mining, lumbering, agriculture—Ploughing the prairies— ‘+ Practical men”’—Fighting wind, sand, and heat—Na- ture eternal—Return of desolation...... i Rai eases 44 CuarterR IV. The Silent River.—Rise of the Colora- do—In the canyon—On the desert—The lower river— Sluggish movement—Stillness of the river—The river’s name—Its red color—Compared with the Nile—The blood hue—River changes—Red sands and silt—River- banks—‘‘ Bottom’? lands—Green bordering bands— Bushes and flowers—Soundless water—Wild fowl—Her- CONTENTS ons and bitterns—Snipe—Sadness of bird-life—The for- saken shores—Solitude—Beauty of the river—Its maj- esty—The delta—Disintegration—The river in flood— The ‘* bore”—Meeting of river and sea—The blue tomb —Shores of Gulf...... Rie se SRb Pan Mia aia eid ais ate . 68 CuapterR V. Light, Air, and Color.—Popular ideas —Sunlight on desert—Glare and heat—Pure sunlight— Atmospheric envelope—Vapor particles in air—Clear air —Dust particles—Hazes—Seeing the desert air—Sea- breezes on desert—Colored air—Different hues—Pro- ducing color—Refracted rays—Cold colors, how produced —Warm colors—Sky colors—Color produced by dust— Effect of heat—Effect of winds—Sand-storms—Reflece tions upon sky—Blue, yellow, and pink hazes—The dust- veil—Summer coloring—Local hues—Greens of desert plants—Color of the sands—Sands in mirage—Color of mountain walls—Weather staining—Influence of the air —Peak of Baboquivari—Buttes and spires—Sun-shafts through canyons—Complementary hues in shadow—Col- ored shadows—Blue shadows upon salt-beds—How light makes color—Desert sunsets............... a Sela mia 77 Cuapter VI. Desert Sky and Clouds.—Common- place things of Nature—The blue sky—Changes in the blue—Dawns on the desert—Blue as a color—Sky from mountain heights—Blackness of space—Bright sky-col- ors—Horizon skies—Spectrum colors—Bands of yellow —The orange sky—Desert-clouds—Rainfall—Effect of the nimbus—Cumuli—Heap-clouds at sunset—Strati— Cirri—Ice-clouds— Fire-clouds—The celestial tapestry— The desert moon—Rings and rainbows—Moonlight— Stars—The midnight sky—Alone in the desert—The mys- teries—Space and immensity—The silences—The cry of the human...... RIA aera a oh Sc ael alaie ad cd! dies seh ae XV Xvi CONTENTS CuartTeR VII. Jllusions.—Reality and appearance— Preconceived impressions—Deception by sunlight—Dis- torted forms and colors—Changed appearance of moun- tains—Changes in line and light—False perspective— Abnormal foreshortening—Contradictions and denials— Deceptive distances—Dangers of the desert—Immensity of valley-plains— Shadow illusions— Color-patches on mountains—lIllusions of lava-beds—Appearance of cloud- shadows—Mirage—Need of explanation—Refraction of light-rays—Dense air-strata—Lllustration of camera-lens —Bent light-rays—Ships at sea and upside down— Wherein the illusion—** Looming ” of vessels, cities, and islands—Reversed image of mountains—Horses and cattle in mirage—Illusion of rising buttes—Other causes of mirage—W ater-mirage—The lake appearance—How pro- duced—Objects in water—Confused mirage—The swim- ming wolf—Colors and shadows in mirage—Trembling qar-—-Beatiy Of MIPSBe, . . o