Hydraulic Mining in California

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Aug. J. Jr. Bowie
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
79
File Size:
3102 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1878

Abstract

(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) Brief Outline of the General Topography of the Gold Regions of California. THE topographical features of California, as demonstrated by the explorations of the State Geological Survey, are found to be exceedingly simple. Three equidistant parallel lines can be used in conveying a general idea of the physical geography of Central California. A straight or " main axial line," whose course would be north 31° west, passing through the culminating peaks of the Sierra for a distance of five hundred miles, can be assumed as the eastern boundary of the State. A second parallel drawn fifty-five miles west of the " main axial line" will skirt the western base of the Sierra Nevada, along the edge of the foot-hills. A third parallel run equidistant from the second will represent "as nearly as possible the western base of the Coast Ranges." These parallel lines divide the State into three belts, namely, the Sierra, the Great Valley of California, and the Coast Ranges. " This arrangement of the physical features holds good for a length of four hundred miles in the direction of the main axial line, comprising almost the whole of the agricultural and the greater part of the mining districts."* The section of the country which is of immediate interest to the miner is the western slope of the Sierras. These mountains, rising in a short distance from the Sacramento plains to elevations of over seven thousand feet, with occasional peaks ten and twelve thousand feet high, are cut by numerous deep and precipitous gorges or capons, through which drains the immense watershed of the Sierra, supplying the main rivers of the State and ultimately emptying into the Pacific Ocean. Between these capons, ridges or divides are formed, on top of * See vol. i, p. 5, Geological Survey of California. J. D. Whitney, State Geologist.
Citation

APA: Aug. J. Jr. Bowie  (1878)  Hydraulic Mining in California

MLA: Aug. J. Jr. Bowie Hydraulic Mining in California. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1878.

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