Ward Valley (California)
Ward Valley (California) | |
---|---|
Floor elevation | 709 ft (216 m)[1] |
Length | 55 mi (89 km) |
Width | 9 mi (14 km) |
Geography | |
Population centers | Milligan, CA; Mountain Springs Summit, California; Goffs, CA; Rice, CA |
Borders on | Old Woman Mountains-W Piute Mountains-W & NW Sacramento Wash (California)-N Bigelow Cholla Garden Wilderness-NE Sacramento Mountains (California)-ENE Stepladder Mountains-E Turtle Mountains (California)-E & SE Rice Valley & Arica Mountains-SSE Granite Mountains (California)-S & SSW Iron Mountains (California)-SW Cadiz Dunes Wilderness-SW & W |
Coordinates | 34°16′18″N 115°04′44″W / 34.27167°N 115.07889°W[1] |
The Ward Valley (California) is a lengthy, almost-true north-south-trending valley in far-eastern San Bernardino County, California.
The south end of the valley expands slightly northwest-by-southeast, and contains Danby Dry Lake, a 13-mi (21 km) long dry lake, or playa. Mountain ranges surround the valley on all sides. The neighboring valleys eastward over the mountain ranges, Chemehuevi Valley, Vidal Valley, and Rice Valley, are all western tributary valleys to the south-flowing Colorado River along the Lower Colorado River Valley corridor.
The center of the valley is approximately just east of the Oro Plata Mine[2] at the east of the Old Woman Mountains. The Iron Mountains with the Iron Mountain Pump Plant of the Colorado River Aqueduct lie on the southwest margin of the valley.[3]
Geography
[edit]Ward Valley contains the three dry lake beds, from west to east: Bristol Lake, Cadiz Dry Lake, and Danby Lake.
Geographically, the entire region of Ward Valley is a transition from higher-elevation bajadas and mountain ranges of the Mojave Desert to lower-elevation sections of Mojave Desert- and the northwest region of the Sonoran Desert in southeast California, called the Colorado Desert. The region has mostly arid mountain ranges, bajadas, flatlands, sand dune fields (from prevailing, seasonal winds), and playas (salt flats).
The lengthy north section of Ward Valley is drained by one major wash, named Homer Wash. Its outfall end, due to scant rainfall, and distance from Danby Lake, ends about 5 mi (8.0 km) from the north side of the lake, as a result of ground infiltration.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Ward Valley (California)
- ^ Oro Plata Mine, Old Woman Mountains: [1]
- ^ California Atlas & Gazetteer, DeLorme, 4th ed. 2015, p. 145 ISBN 0899333834
External links
[edit]- Approximately valley center (N-S), at western foothills of mountains, Topoquest.com, the Oro Plata Mine
- Media related to Ward Valley at Wikimedia Commons