Mojave Desert

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Looking across from Emigrant Pass towards the Kingston Range in the eastern Mojave. The Old Spanish Trail passed through the valley in the foreground.

The Mojave Desert (Mojave is used for the desert while Mohave is used for the native people) occupies a significant portion of southern California and smaller parts of southwestern Utah, southern Nevada, and northwestern Arizona, in the United States. Named after the Mohave tribe of Native Americans, it occupies over 22,000 mi² (35,000 km²) in a typical Basin and Range topography.

The Mojave Desert is bounded in part by the Tehachapi together with the San Gabriel and San Bernadino mountain ranges. The mountain boundaries are quite distinct since they are outlined by the two largest faults in California: the San Andreas and the Garlock. Its northern and eastern boundaries are less distinct. One way to determine entry is by observing the presence of Joshua Trees. The desert is believed to have between 1,750 and 2,000 species of plants.

Climate

The Mojave Desert receives less than 6 inches (150 mm) of rain a year and is generally between 3,000 and 6,000 feet (1,000 and 2,000 m) in elevation. The Mojave Desert also contains the Mojave National Preserve and the lowest and hottest place in North America: Death Valley, where the temperature normally approaches 120°F (50°C) in late July and early August, also in California is Joshua Tree National Park. Zion National Park, in Utah, lies at the junction of the Mojave, the Great Basin, and the Colorado Plateau. Despite its aridity, the Mojave (and particularly the Antelope Valley in its southwest) has long been a center of alfalfa production, fed by irrigation coming from groundwater and (in the 20th century) from the California Aqueduct.

The Mojave, like all deserts in general, is known for its summer heat; however, much less renowned is the Mojave's wintertime cold. Snow, although uncommon, does fall in parts of the Mojave. Amounts range from just a trace to a foot or more of heavy wet snow which can lead to freeway traffic closures and being "snowed in". The coldest wintertime temperature ranges have been below freezing yet above 0°F. That said, many parts of the Mojave typically range from highs of around 95–105°F in the summer to lows of around 20–30°F in the winter.

Wind is also a weather factor. Las Vegas, situated on the desert's east, may have relatively few winds, but the community of Mojave, situated at its western end, can have wind nearly every day — even winds surpassing fifty miles per hour. Nearby Tehachapi Pass, due to the high likelihood of reliable wind, is home to an extensive electrical Wind turbine "Wind farm" which converts wind, a renewable-clean-resource, into electricity.

<--I made this header because these prargraphs need to be separate from climate but it needs a better name than this one-->

Cities and regions

The Mojave Desert contains a number of ghost towns, the most significant of these being the silver-mining town of Calico, California and the old railroad depot of Kelso. Some of the other ghost towns are of the more modern variety, created when Route 66 (and the lesser-known US Highway 91) were abandoned in favor of the Interstates. The Mojave Desert is crossed by major highways Interstate 15, Interstate 40, US Highway 395 and US Highway 95.

Among the more popular and unique tourist attractions in the Mojave is the self described world's tallest thermometer at 134 feet high, reportedly also the highest °F temperature ever recorded in the region, which is located along Interstate 15 in Baker, California. Kelso Dunes is also a popular recreation spot.

The Mojave River is an important source of water in this arid land. A part of the Colorado River also traverses its far eastern portion.

The Mojave Desert is not entirely rural as a few cities do exist there. Las Vegas, Nevada is the Mojave's largest city and metropolitan area. Palmdale is the largest city by population on the California side of the desert and is part of the Lancaster/Palmdale Urbanized Area, a U.S. Census Bureau defined term. Other incorporated cities include Littlefield and Kingman in Arizona; Boulder City, Henderson, Jean, North Las Vegas, Laughlin, Pahrump, and Primm in Nevada; Victorville, Barstow, Ridgecrest, Twentynine Palms, and Needles in California; and Hurricane, Ivins, La Verkin, Virgin, St. George, Santa Clara, Springdale, and Washington in Utah.

Angelenos often refer to its southwestern portions, the Antelope Valley and the Victor Valley, as the High Desert.

Mojave Desert in fiction

The Newcomer ship in Alien Nation hovered over the Mojave Desert at its fictional 1988 arrival.

Captain Christopher Pike of the Star Trek universe called the Mojave his home, having grown up in the town of Mojave, built in what was once desert "wasteland".

The play Fool For Love, written and directed by Sam Shepard in 1983, takes place on the edge of the Mojave desert.

In the second season of 24 George Mason sacrifices his life to dispose a nuclear bomb safely in the Mojave Desert.

In the book and Film for Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. When Raoul Duke, Dr. Gonzo and the hitchhiker are on their way to Las vegas, they are driving by the Mojave desert. Duke is contemplating what to do with the Hitchhiker. " How long could we maintain, I wondered. How long before one of us starts raving and jabbering at this boy? What will he think then? This same lonely desert was the last known home of the Manson family, will he make this grim connection when my attorney starts screaming about bats and huge manta rays coming down on the car?"

Native Mojave plants and animals

Plants

Animals

Photos from the Mojave Desert

See also

External links

References

  • Mojave Desert Wildflowers, Jon Mark Stewart, 1998, pg. iv