Death Valley
Oscar C. Carter | August 22nd, 1903
Judging from the many high sensation stories and frequent references to Death Valley, there is evidently a popular interest in that dreaded locality, which is in part explicable by the name it bears. The stories published are, as a rule, of little value, and give no idea of the climate, topography, fauna, and flora of a more absolute and arid desert than the Sahara. Our great deserts of the southwest have been but little written about by geographers and travelers, and it is only recently that accurate official reports upon them have been made. Capt. Clarence E . Dutton, in his report on the Grand Canon, gave a description of the deserts of northern Arizona. Captain Gaillard, of the Mexican Boundary Commission, has given us, in a popular magazine, probably the best article that has as yet been written on an American desert. He was well qualified to write, because he traversed the entire region from the Rio Grande to the Pacific, erecting monument s to mark the boundary between Mexico and the United States. Mr. W.J. McGee, Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology, who recently made the journey through Southern Arizona and Mexico, to study the Seri Indians, who live on the Isle of Tiburon in the Gulf of California, has given us a fine description of the desert in his report and in separate articles in the Journal of Geography. A valuable article on the American Desert, by Robert T. Hill, has just appeared.
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