Dublin Gulch, Shoshone, Ca. – 2015
Dublin Gulch, Shoshone, Ca. – 2003
These photos were shot in 2003 with a Sony Mavica digital camera. Unfortunately, the original full-size (still low resolution) photos were lost. These images have been recovered from 320×240 images that were posted on the Digital-Desert website.
“In the spring of 1880, George Goreman and P. Dwyer, prospectors from Ivanpah, discovered rock that assayed from $640 to $5,000 a ton in silver. Their discovery, about 15 miles south of the old Macedonia District, was the birth of the Bonanza King Mine.”
Canada Geese at Saratoga Springs, Death Valley National Park
Owl Canyon
Owl Canyon
Ambient Sunrise
Coxcomb Mountains
Apple Valley – Joshua Tree Forest
Zzyzx – Desert Studies Center
Techatticup Mine – Eldorado Canyon, Nelson, Nevada – 3/2015
Nelson, Nevada – 3/2015
Lucerne Dry Lake
Tomorrow’s Sunrise
Wild Places – Cougar Buttes
The high country is different than the low country. The high country is higher and of course the low country, lower.
Petroglyphs – February 2011
These maps are based on a USGS 1901 base map and overlay onto a current street map. This series was developed to show how the dependence on potable water for man or beast shaped the transportation network in the late 19th Century.
This map identifies various geographic locations, general features, and roads throughout the Lucerne & Johnson valleys as it was in 1901.
The blue marks show reliable water and rest stops as would be used by travelers and teamsters. These water stops are roughly 10 miles apart as the roads go.
The generalized trails connecting the water and rest stops are highlighted. A few redundant and miscellaneous trails have been purposely omitted for clarity.
This map has had the 1901 base map replaced with a current street map.
This map has had the water node locations removed.
Finally, the 1901 trails have been highlighted and the location labels removed for clarity in showing the relationship between the roads then and now.
Soggy Dry Lake – Johnson Valley
Playa formation – “A playa is a dry, vegetation-free, flat area at the lowest part of an undrained desert basin. It is a location where ephemeral lakes form during wet periods, and is underlain by stratified clay, silt, and sand, and commonly, soluble salts. Playas occur in intermountain basins throughout the arid southwestern United States. Although playas may appear as featureless plains, they are rich in features and characteristics that can reveal information about climates, past and present. “