A Land Between Owens Valley, California
- Binding: Paperback
- Publisher: Johns Hopkins Univ Pr
- Publish date: 11/01/2000
Beginning with the land itself, the book's introduction describes the physical setting of Owens Valley and examines first impressions of the land -- including accounts from Numu myth, observations by nineteenth-century settlers, and excerpts from the author's journal of her own travels on horseback from the valley into the Sierra Nevada. The first essay explores the valley's natural history, focusing on the water, mountains, and plants to show a connection between the ecology of place and human use. The second essay chronicles the major periods of human occupation, beginning with the Numu (also referred to as Owens Valley Paiute in many sources) and ending in 1913, when the Department of Water and Power first diverted Owens River into the Los Angeles aqueduct. The third essay considers the valley after the diversion of water, from 1913 to the present -- including its use as a World War II Japanese internment camp and as a scenic locale for movies, especially westerns.
Owens Valley is renowned for its unique topography and its striking contrasts in elevation -- rising from the below-sea-level depths of Death Valleyto the 14,496-foot peak of Mt. Whitney. To search for the natural and cultural history embedded in Owens Valley, the author hiked to the top of that mountain, traveled on horseback across the meadows of the Kern Plateau, ventured on every forgotten dirt road in the valley that her truck could negotiate, and rambled on foot over the ancient stones of the Alabama Hills. A Land Between tells the stories of the people who have lived in the valley and uncovers the marks they have left on the land.
Seller | Condition | Comments | Price |
Ergodebooks
|
New |
$32.77
|
|
GridFreed
New |
$87.20
|