A Natural History of Oregon's Lake Abert in the Northwest Great Basin Landscape


Book Description

A beautifully detailed exploration of flora and fauna. Author Ron Larson offers a natural history of a Great Basin landscape that focuses on the northern region including Lake Abert and Abert Rim, and the adjacent area in southcentral Oregon. Although the jewel of this landscape is a lake, the real story is the many plants and animals—from the very primitive, reddish, bacteria-like archaea that thrive only in its high-salinity waters to the Golden Eagles and ravens that soar above the desert. The untold species in and around the lake are part of an ecosystem shaped by ageless processes from massive lava flows, repeated drought, and blinding snowstorms. It is an environment rich with biotic and physical interconnections going back millions of years. The Great Basin, and in particular the Lake Abert region, is special and needs our attention to ensure it remains that way. We must recognize the importance of water for Great Basin ecosystems and the need to manage it better, and we must acknowledge how rich the Great Basin is in natural history. Salt lakes, wherever they occur, are valuable and provide critically important habitat for migratory water birds, which are unfortunately under threat from upstream water diversions and climate change. Larson’s book will help people understand that the Great Basin is unique and that wise stewardship is necessary to keep it unspoiled. The book is an essential reference source, drawing together a wide range of materials that will appeal to general readers and researchers alike.







Volcanoes to Vineyards


Book Description

"This volume contains guides for 34 geological field trips offered in conjunction with the October 2009 GSA Annual Meeting in Portland, Oregon. Showcasing the region's geological diversity, the peer-reviewed papers included here span topics ranging from accreted terrains and mantle plumes to volcanoes, floods, and vineyard terroir. Locations visited throughout Oregon, Washington, and Idaho encompass Astoria to Zillah. More than just a series of maps, the accompanying descriptions, observations, and conclusions offer new insights to the geologic processes and history of the Pacific Northwest - insights that will inspire readers to put their boots on the evidence as they develop their own understanding of this remarkable and dynamic corner of the world."--Publisher's description.




Butterflies of the Pacific Northwest


Book Description

Winner of the 2018 National Outdoor Book Award, Nature Guide Books Category Easy to use and beautifully illustrated with more than 600 color photographs and nearly 200 maps, Butterflies of the Pacific Northwest is a must-have for nature lovers in Washington, Oregon, western Idaho, northern California, and British Columbia. The profiles include preferred common name for both genus and species, type locality, conservation status, the look and distinguishing traits of each butterfly, the preferred foodplants and nectar plants, habitat and range, and much more. Additional information includes a brief introduction to how butterflies work and details on ecology and conservation.




United States West Coast


Book Description

The most up-to-date and insightful overview available on the environmental history of the West Coast of the United States, a region of extraordinary physical beauty distinguished by its inhabitants' efforts to both sustain and exploit their natural resources. Part of ABC-CLIO's Nature and Human Societies series, United States West Coast: An Environmental History explores the interplay of ecology, economy, and culture throughout the history of the region of North America where the waters drain to the Pacific Ocean. Synthesizing the most recent and insightful studies on the region, United States West Coast portrays environmental change in the far western United States from the emergence of humans in the Pacific Northwest (about 12,000 years ago), to the rise of European colonial trade networks, to the era of industrialization and urbanization, to present day activism and public policy responses to environmental damage. By investigating how humans interact with their nonhuman surroundings across a specific expanse that encompasses all kinds of landscapes, cultures, and commercial enterprises, this insightful volume shows just how interdependent the relationship between people and their environment is.




The Condor


Book Description




Geology of Pluvial Lake Chewaucan, Lake County, Oregon


Book Description

Pluvial Lake Chewaucan was a late Pleistocene lake, as much as 375 feet deep, covering 480 square miles in the northwestern part of the Great Basin in southern Oregon. The lake basin, now occupied by Summer Lake, Upper and Lower Chewaucan Marshes, and Lake Abert, was formed by down-dropped fault blocks bounded by imposing fault scarps, notably Winter Ridge and Abert Rim. Several large landslides occurred along the east side of Winter Ridge. Lake Chewaucan shore features include wave-cut cliffs and caves, beaches, terraces, bay bars, spits (as at The Narrows), and a huge alluvial fan built by Chewaucan River at Paisley. Later, at lower lake stages, part of the fan deposit of sand and gravel was distributed across four-mile-wide Paisley Flat, which subsequently became a divide between Winter Lake in the Summer Lake basin and ZX Lake (new name) in the Chewaucan Marshes-Lake Abert part of the Lake Chewaucan basin. Overflow from ZX Lake later cut a shallow channel across the divide enroute to Winter Lake. The bottom sediments of Lake Chewaucan are exposed mainly in the bluffs of Ana River, the main source of Summer Lake water. The stratigraphic section there is about 54 feet thick and composed mainly of silt, with numerous seams of sand, oolites, occasional pebbles, and many layers of volcanic ash, especially near the top. Fossils found in the area include 1) mammals and birds obtained from man-occupied caves near Paisley, 2) ostracods, diatoms, and small mollusks in the Ana River section, 3) similar tiny snail shells in a gravel pit north of the Ana Springs Reservoir, and 4) additional shells from the 4425-foot level near Ten Mile Butte east of Summer Lake. The snail shells have radiocarbon ages of>25,900, 22,000, and 17,500 years - all within the span of the Tioga-Pinedale glacial stage of the Sierra Nevada and the Rocky Mountains. The top 4520-foot shoreline, the 4485-foot beach and Paisley Caves, and the bulk of the Paisley fan may possibly be Tahoe in age, but the wave erosion of the Paisley fan, development of Paisley Flat, overflow from ZX Lake, and later formation of ZX Red House beach are assigned to Tioga-Pinedale time. The history of Lake Chewaucan is thought to be analogous to those of Lake Bonneville, Lake Lahontan, and Searles Lake, and correlative with climatic changes recorded in marine deposits. The post-Lake Chewaucan history of the basin includes Anathermal, Altithermal, and Medithermal climatic changes, as shown by a pollen profile in Upper Chewaucan Marsh. Mount Mazama pumice sand fell in the area about 6,600-6,700 years ago. Desiccation and wind work were strong in Altithermal time. In the Neopluvial (new term), corresponding to Neoglaciation in the mountains (perhaps 4,000-2,000 years ago), new lakes many tens of feet deep developed in the Summer Lake and Chewaucan Marshes-Lake Abert basins. Later, Summer Lake and Lake Abert were reduced to the very shallow, alkaline bodies of water of the present day.




An Archaeological Survey in the Lake Abert-Chewaucan Basin Lowlands, Lake County, Oregon


Book Description

An intensive archaeological reconnaissance was conducted for eight weeks in the period between June 18, 1984 and September 5, 1984, as the first step to provide a regional framework in which these east shore sites could be placed. This survey focused on the lowland areas around Lake Abert and the Lower Chewaucan Marsh. Approximately 18 square miles were surveyed in the course of the project, resulting in the discovery of 193 previously unrecorded sites.




Many Wests


Book Description

What does it mean to live in the West today? Do people tend to identify with states, with regions, or with the larger West? This book examines the development of regional identity in the American West, demonstrating that it is a regionally diverse entity made up of many different wests--Great Plains, Southwest, Rocky Mountains, and more--in which American regionalism finds its fullest expression. These fourteen original essays tell how a sense of place emerged among residents of various regions and how a sense of those places was developed by people outside of them. Wrobel and Steiner first offer a compelling overview of the West's regional nature; then thirteen other rising or renowned scholars-from history, American Studies, geography, and literature-tell how regional consciousness formed among inhabitants of particular regions. All of the essays address the larger issue of the centrality of place in determining social and cultural forms and individual and collective identities. Some focus on race and culture as the primary influences on regional consciousness while others emphasize environmental and economic factors or the influence of literature. Some even examine western regionalism in areas that lie beyond the West as it has traditionally been conceived. Each of the contributors believes that where a people live helps determine what they are, and they write not only about the many wests within the larger West, but also about the constant state of flux in which regionalism exists. Many books speak of the West as a place, but few others deal with the West's different places. Many Wests presents a vision of the West that reflects both the common heritage and unique character of each major subregion, building on the revisionist impulse of the last decade to help redirect New Western History toward an appreciation of regional diversity and integrate scholarship in the regional subfields. It is a book for everyone who lives in, studies, or loves the West, for it confirms that it is home to very different peoples, economies, histories-and regions.