the john muir exhibit - writings - studies_in_the_sierra - chapter 3
Studies in the Sierra
by John Muir
III
Ancient Glaciers and Their Pathways
Though the gigantic glaciers of the Sierra are dead, their history
is indelibly recorded in characters of rock, mountain, cañon,
and forest; and, although other hieroglyphics are being incessantly
engraved over these, "line upon line," the glacial characters
are so enormously emphasized that they rise free and unconfused
in sublime relief, through every after inscription, whether of
the torrent, the avalanche, or the restless heaving atmosphere.
In order to give the reader definite conceptions of the magnitude
and aspect of these ancient ice-rivers, I will briefly outline
those which were most concerned in the formation of Yosemite Valley
and its cañon branches. We have seen (in the previous chapter)
that Yosemite received the simultaneous thrust of the Yosemite
Creek, Hoffmann, Tenaya, South Lyell, and Illilouette glaciers.
These welded themselves together into one huge trunk, which swept
down through the valley, receiving small affluents in its course
from Pohono, Sentinel, and Indian cañons, and those on
both sides of El Capitan Rock. At this period most of the upper
portions of the walls of the valley were bare; but during its
earliest history, the wide mouths of these several glaciers formed
an almost uninterrupted covering of ice. All the ancient glaciers
of the Sierra fluctuated in depth and width, and in degree of
individuality, down to the latest glacial days. It must, therefore,
be distinctly borne in mind that the following sketches of these
upper Merced glaciers relate only to their separate condition,
and to that phase of their separate condition which they presented
toward the close of the period when Yosemite and its branches
were works nearly accomplished.
Yosemite Creek Glacier
The broad, many-fountained glacier to which the basin of Yosemite
Creek belonged, was about fourteen miles in length by four in width, and
in many places was not less than a thousand feet in depth. Its principal
tributaries issued from lofty amphitheatres laid well back among the
northern spurs of the Hoffmann range. These at first pursued a
westerly course; then, uniting with each other and absorbing a
series of small affluents from the Tuolumne divide, the trunk
thus formed swept round to the south in a magnificent curve, and
poured its ice into Yosemite in cascades two miles wide. This
broad glacier formed a kind of wrinkled ice-cloud. As it grew
older, it became more regular and riverlike; encircling peaks
overshadowed its upper fountains, rock islets rose at intervals
among its shallowing currents, and its bright sculptured banks,
nowhere overflowed, extended in massive simplicity all the way
to its mouth. As the ice-winter drew near a close, the main
trunk, becoming torpid, at length wholly disappeared in the sun,
and a waiting multitude of plants and animals entered the new
valley to inhabit the mansions prepared for them. In the meantime
the chief tributaries, creeping slowly back into the shelter of
their fountain shadows, continued to live and work independently,
spreading moraine soil for gardens, scooping basins for lakelets,
and leisurely completing the sculpture of their fountains. These
also have at last vanished, and the whole basin is now full of
light. Forests flourish luxuriantly over all its broad moraines,
lakes and meadows nestle among its domes, and a thousand flowery
gardens are outspread along its streams.
Hoffmann Glacier
The short, swift-flowing Hoffmann Glacier offered a striking
contrast to the Yosemite Creek, in the energy and directness of
its movements, and the general tone and tendencies of its life.
The erosive energy of the latter was diffused over a succession
of low boulderlike domes. Hoffmann Glacier, on the contrary, moved
straight to its mark, making a descent of 5,000 feet in about
five miles, steadily deepening and contracting its current, and
finally thrusting itself against the upper portion of Yosemite
in the form of a wedge of solid ice, six miles in length by four
in width. The concentrated action of this energetic glacier, combined
with that of the Tenaya, accomplished the greater portion of the
work of the disinterment and sculpture of the great Half Dome,
North Dome, and the adjacent rocks. Its fountains, ranged along
the southern slopes of the main Hoffmann ridge, gave birth to
a series of flat, wing-shaped tributaries, separated from
one another by picturesque walls built of massive blocks, bedded
and jointed like masonry. The story of its death is not unlike
that of the Yosemite Creek, though the declivity of its channel
and equal exposure to sun-heat prevented any considerable
portion from passing through a torpid condition. It was first
burned off on its lower course;
then, creeping slowly back, lingered a while at the base of its
mountains to finish their sculpture, and encircle them with a
zone of moraine soil for gardens and forests.
The gray slopes of Mount Hoffmann are singularly barren in aspect,
yet the traveler who is so fortunate as to ascend them will find
himself in the very loveliest gardens of the Sierra. The lower
banks and slopes of the basin are plushed with chaparral rich
in berries and bloom--a favorite resort for bears; while the middle
region is planted with the most superb forest of silver-fir
I ever beheld. Nowhere are the cold footsteps of ice more warmly
covered with light and life.
Tenaya Glacier
The rugged, strong-limbed Tenaya Glacier was about twelve
miles long, and from half a mile to two and a half miles wide.
Its depth varied from near 500 to 2,000 feet, according as its
current was outspread in many channels or compressed in one. Instead
of drawing its supplies directly from the summit fountains, it
formed one of the principal outlets of the Tuolumne mer de
glace, issuing at once from this noble source a full-grown
glacier two miles wide and more than a thousand feet deep. It
flowed in a general southwesterly direction, entering Yosemite
at the head, between Half and North Domes. In setting out on its
life-work it moved slowly, spending its strength in ascending
the Tuolumne divide, and in eroding a series of parallel sub-channels
leading over into the broad, shallow basin of Lake Tenaya. Hence,
after uniting its main current, which had been partially separated
in crossing the divide, and receiving a swift-flowing affluent
from the fountains of Cathedral Peak, it set forth again with
renewed vigor, pouring its massive floods over the southwestern
rim of the basin in a series of splendid cascades; then, crushing
heavily against the ridge of Clouds Rest, curved toward the west,
quickened its pace, focalized its wavering currents, and bore
down upon Yosemite with its whole concentrated energy. Toward
the end of the ice-period, and while the upper tributaries
of its Hoffmann companion continued to grind rock-meal for
coming forests, the whole body of Tenaya became torpid, withering
simultaneously from end to end, instead of dying gradually from
the foot upward. Its upper portion separated into long parallel
strips extending between the Tenaya basin and Tuolumne mer
de glare. These, together with the shallow ice-clouds
of the lake-basin melted rapidly, exposing broad areas of
rolling rock-waves and glossy pavements, on whose channelless
surface water ran everywhere wild and free. There are no very
extensive morainal accumulations of any sort in
the basin. The largest occur on the divide, near the Big Tuolumne
Meadows, and on the sloping ground northwest of Lake Tenaya.*
[* Because the main trunk died almost simultaneously throughout
its whole extent, we, of course, find no terminal moraines curved
across its channels, nor, since its banks were in most places
too steeply inclined for their disposition, do we find much of
the two laterals. One of the first Tenaya glacierets was developed
in the shadow of Yosemite Half Dome. Others were formed along
the bases of Coliseum Peak, and the long, precipitous walls extending
from near Lake Tenaya to the Big Tuolumne Meadows. The latter,
on account of the uniformity and continuity of their protecting
shadows, formed moraines of considerable length and regularity,
that are liable to be mistaken for portions of the left lateral
moraine of the main glacier.]
For a distance of six miles from its mouth the pathway of this
noble glacier is a simple trough from 2,000 to 3,000 feet deep,
countersunk in the solid granite, with sides inclined at angles
with the horizon of from thirty to fifty degrees. Above this its
grand simplicity is interrupted by huge moutonéed ridges
extending in the general direction of its length over into the
basin of Lake Tenaya. Passing these, and crossing the bright glacial
pavements that border the lake, we find another series of ridges,
from 500 to 1,200 feet in height, extending over the divide to
the ancient Tuolumne ice-fountain. Their bare moutonéed
forms and polished surfaces indicate that they were overswept,
existing at first as mere boulders beneath the mighty glacier
that flowed in one unbroken current between Cathedral Peak and
the southeast shoulder of the Hoffmann range.
Nevada or South Lyell Glacier
The South Lyell Glacier was less influential than the last, but
longer and more symmetrical, and the only one of the Merced system
whose sources extended directly to the main summits on the axis
of the chain. Its numerous ice-wombs, now mostly barren,
range side by side in three distinct series at an elevation above
sea-level of from 10,000 to 12,000 feet. The first series
on the right side of the basin extends from the Matterhorn to
Cathedral Peak in a northwesterly direction a distance of about
twelve miles. The second series extends in the same direction
along the left side of the basin in the summits of the Merced
group, and is about six miles in length. The third is about nine
miles long, and extends along the head of the basin in a direction
at right angles to that of the others, and unites with them at
their southeastern extremities. The three ranges of summits in
which these fountains are laid, and the long continuous ridge
of Clouds Rest, enclose a rectangular basin, leaving an outlet
near the southwest corner opposite its principal nave fountains,
situated in the dark jagged peaks of the Lyell group. The main
central trunk, lavishly fed by these numerous fountains, was from
1,000 to 1,400 feet in depth, from three-fourths of a mile
to a mile and a half in width, and about fifteen
miles in length. It first flowed in a northwesterly direction
for a few miles, then curving toward the left, pursued a westerly
course, and poured its shattered cascading currents down into Yosemite
between Half Dome and Mount Starr King.
Portion of the Left Bank of the Channel of the South Lyell Glacier,
near the Mouth of Cathedral Tributary.
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Could we have visited Yosemite toward the close of the glacial
period, we should have found its ice-cascades vastly more glorious
than their tiny water representatives of the present hour. One of the
most sublime of these was formed by that portion of the South
Lyell current which descended the broad, rounded shoulder of Half
Dome. The whole glacier resembled an oak with a gnarled swelling
base and wide-spreading branches. Its banks, a few miles
above Yosemite, were adorned with groups of picturesque rocks
of every conceivable form and mode of combination, among which
glided swift-descending affluents, mottled with black slates
from the summits, and gray granite blocks from ridges and headlands.
One of the most interesting facts relating to the early history
of this glacier is, that the lofty cathedral spur forming the
northeast boundary of its basin was broken through and overflowed
by deep ice-currents from the Tuolumne region. The scored and
polished gaps eroded by them in their passage across the summit
of the spur, trend with admirable steadiness in a northeasterly
and southwesterly direction; a fact of great importance, considered
in its bearings upon questions relating to the universal ice-sheet.
Traces of a similar overflow from the northeast occur on the
edges of the basins of all the Yosemite glaciers.
The principal moraines of the basin occur in short, irregular
sections scattered along the sides of the valleys, or spread in
rough beds in level portions of their bottoms, without manifesting
subordination to any system whatever. This fragmentary condition
is due to interruptions caused by portions of the sides of the
valleys being too precipitous for moraine matter to rest upon
and to breakings and down-washings of torrents and avalanches
of winter snow. The obscurity resulting from these causes is further
augmented by forests and underbrush, making a patient study of
details indispensable to the recognition of their unity and simple
grandeur. The south lateral moraine of the lower portion of the
trunk may be traced about five miles, from the mouth of the north
tributary of Mount Clark to the cañon of Illilouette, though
simplicity of structure has in most places been prevented by the
nature of the ground and by the action of a narrow margin glacier
which descended against it with variable pressure from cool, shadowy
slopes above. The corresponding section of the right lateral, extending
from the mouth of Cathedral tributary to Half Dome, is far more
perfect in structure, because of the evenness of
the ground, and because the ice-wing which curved against
Clouds Rest and descended against it was fully exposed to the
sun, and was, therefore, melted long before the main trunk, allowing
the latter to complete the formation of this section of its moraine
undisturbed. Some conception of its size and general character
may be obtained by following the Clouds Rest and Yosemite trail,
which crosses it obliquely, leading past several cross-sections
made by small streams. A few slate boulders from the Lyell group
may be seen, but the main mass of the moraine is composed of ordinary
granite and porphyry, the latter having been derived from Feldspar
and Cathedral valleys.
The elevation of the top of the moraine near Cathedral tributary
is about 8,100 feet; near Half Dome, 7,600. It rests upon the
side of the valley at angles varying from fifteen to twenty-five
degrees, and in many places is straight and uniform as a railroad
embankment. The greatest depth of the glacier between Clouds Rest
and Mount Starr King, measuring from the highest points of its
lateral moraines, was 1,300 feet. The recurrence of ridges and
terraces on its sides indicate oscillations in the level of the
glacier, probably caused by clusters of cooler or snowier seasons
which no doubt diversified the great glacial winter, just as clusters
of sunny or stormy days occasion fluctuations in the level of
the streams and prevent monotony in our annual winters. When the
depth of the South Lyell Glacier diminished to about 500 feet,
it became torpid, on account of the retardation caused by the
roughness and crookedness of its channel. But though it henceforth
made no farther advance of its whole length, it possessed feeble
vitality-in small sections, of exceptional slope or depth, maintaining
a squirming and swedging motion, while it lay dying like a wounded
serpent. The numerous fountain wombs continued fruitful long after
the lower valleys were developed and vitalized with sun-heat.
These gave rise to an imposing series of short residual glaciers,
extending around three sides of the quadrangle basin, a distance
of twenty-four miles. Most of them have but recently succumbed
to the demands of the changing seasons, dying in turn, as determined
by elevation, size, and exposure. A few still linger in the loftiest
and most comprehensive shadows, actively engaged upon the last
hieroglyphics which will complete the history of the South Lyell
Glacier, forming one of the noblest and most symmetrical sheets
of ice manuscripts in the whole Sierra.
Illilouette
The broad, shallow glacier that inhabited the basin of Illilouette
more resembled a lake than a river, being nearly half as wide
as it was long.
Its greatest length was about ten miles, and its depth perhaps
nowhere much exceeded 700 feet. Its chief fountains were ranged
along the western side of the Merced spur at an elevation of about
10,000 feet. These gave birth to magnificent affluents, flowing
in a westerly direction for several miles, in full independence,
and uniting near the center of the basin. The
principal trunk curved northward, grinding heavily against the
lofty wall forming its left bank, and finally poured its ice into
Yosemite by the South Cañon between Glacier Point and Mount
Starr King. All the phenomena relating to glacial action in this
basin are remarkably simple and orderly, on account of the sheltered
positions occupied by its principal fountains with reference to
the unifying effects of ice-currents from the main summits
of the chain. A fine general view, displaying the principal moraines
sweeping out into the middle of the basin from Black, Red, Gray,
and Clark mountains may be obtained from the eastern base of the
cone of Starr King. The right lateral of the tributary which took
its rise between Red and Black mountains is a magnificent piece
of ice-work. Near the upper end, where it is joined to the
shoulder of Red Mountain, it is 250 feet in height, and displays
three well marked terraces. From the first to the second of these,
the vertical descent is eighty-five feet, and inclination
of the surface fifteen degrees; from the second to the third,
ninety-five feet, and inclination twenty-five degrees; and
from the third to the bottom of the channel, seventy feet, made
at an angle of nineteen degrees. The smoothness of the uppermost
terrace shows that it is considerably more ancient than the others,
many of the blocks of which it was composed having crumbled to
sand.
A few miles farther down, the moraine has an average slope in
front of about twenty-seven degrees, and an elevation above
the bottom of the channel of six hundred and sixty-six feet.
More than half of the side of the channel from the top is covered
with moraine matter, and overgrown with a dense growth of chaparral,
composed of manzanita, cherry, and castanopsis. Blocks of rose-colored
granite, many of them very large, occur at intervals all the way
from the western base of Mount Clark to Starr King, indicating
exactly the course pursued by the ice when the north divide of
the basin was overflowed, Mount Clark being the only source whence
they could possibly have been derived.
Near the middle of the basin, just where the regular moraines
flatten out and disappear, there is outspread a smooth gravel
slope, planted with the olive-green Arctostaphylos glauca
so as to appear in the distance as a delightful meadow. Sections
cut by streams show it to be composed of the same material as
the moraines, but finer and more water-worn. The
main channel, which is narrow at this point, appears to have been
dammed up with ice and terminal moraines, thus giving rise to
a central lake, at the bottom of which moraine matter was re-ground
and subsequently spread and leveled by the impetuous action of
its outbreaking waters. The southern boundary of the basin is
a strikingly perfect wall, extending sheer and unbroken from Black
Mountain*
[* This mountain occurs next south of Red Mountain, and must not
be confounded with the Black Mountain six miles farther south.]
to Buena Vista Peak, casting a long, cool shadow all
through the summer for the protection of fountain snow. The northern
rim presents a beautiful succession of smooth undulations, rising
here and there to a dome, their pale gray sides dotted with junipers
and silver-leafed pines, and separated by dark, feathery
base-fringes of fir.
The ice-plows of Illilouette, ranged side by side in orderly
gangs, have furrowed its rocks with admirable uniformity, producing
irrigating channels for a brood of wild streams, and abundance
of deep, rich soils, adapted to every requirement of garden and
grove. No other section of the Yosemite uplands is in so high
a state of glacial cultivation. Its clustering domes, sheer walls,
and lofty towering peaks, however majestic in themselves, are
only border adornments, submissively subordinate to their sublime
garden center. The basins of Yosemite Creek, Tenaya, and South
Lyell are pages of sculptured rocks embellished with gardens.
The Illilouette basin is one grand garden embellished with rocks.
Nature manifests her love for the number five in her glaciers,
as well as in the petals of the flowers which she plants in their
pathways. These five Yosemite glaciers we have been sketching
are as directly related to one another, and for as definite an
object, as are the organs of a plant. After uniting in the valley,
and expending the down-thrusting power with which they were
endowed by virtue of the declivity of their channels, the trunk
flowed up out of the valley without yielding much compliance
to the crooked and comparatively small river cañon extending
in a general westerly direction from the foot of the main valley.
In effecting its exit a considerable ascent was made, traces of
which are to be seen in the upward slope of the worn, rounded
extremities of the valley walls. Down this glacier-constructed
grade descend both the Coulterville and Mariposa trails; and we
might further observe in this connection that, because the ice-sheet
near the period of transition to distinct glaciers flowed southwesterly
the south lips of all Yosemites trending east and west, other
conditions being equal, are more heavily eroded, making the construction
of trails on that side easier. The first trail, therefore, that
was made into
Yosemite, was of course made down over the south lip. The only
trail entering the Tuolumne Yosemite descends the south lip, and
so also does the only trail leading into the Kings River Yosemite.
A large majority of deer and bear and Indian trails likewise descend
the south lips of Yosemites. So extensively are the movements
of men and animals controlled by the previous movements of certain
snow-crystals combined as glaciers.
The direction pursued by the Yosemite trunk, after escaping from
the valley, is unmistakably indicated by its immense lateral moraines
extending from its lips in a west-southwesterly direction.
The right moraine was disturbed by the large tributary of Cascade
Creek, and is extremely complicated in structure. The left is
simple until it comes under the influence of tributaries from
the southeast, and both are further obscured by forests which
flourish upon their mixed soil, and by the washing of rains and
melting snows, and the weathering of their boulders, making a
smooth, sandy, unmorainelike surface. It is, therefore, the less
to be wondered at that the nature of these moraines, which represent
so important a part of the chips hewn from the valley in the course
of its formation, should not have been sooner recognized. Similarly
situated moraines extend from the lips of every Yosemite wherever
the ground admits of their deposition and retention. In Hetch-Hetchy
and other smaller and younger Yosemites of the upper Merced, the
ascending striae which measure the angle of ascent made
by the bottom of their glaciers in their outflow are still clearly
visible.
Fig. 1
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Fig. 1 is the horizontal section of the end of a Yosemite valley,
showing the ordinary boat-shaped edge, and lateral moraines
(M M) extending from the lips. The moraines and arrows indicate
the course pursued by the outflowing ice.
Fig. 2
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Fig. 2 represents the
right lip of Yosemite, situated on the upper Merced below the
confluence of Cathedral tributary. The whole lip is polished and
striated. The arrows indicate the direction of the
striae,
which measure the angle of ascent made by the outflowing ice.
In the presentation of these studies, we have proceeded thus far
with the assumption that all the valleys of the region are valleys
of erosion, and that glaciers were the principal eroding agents;
because the intelligible discussion of these propositions requires
some knowledge of the physiognomy and general configuration of
the region, as well as of the history of its ancient glaciers.
Our space is here available only for very brief outlines of a
portion of the argument, which will be gradually developed in
subsequent articles.
That fossils were created as they occur in the rocks, is an ancient
doctrine,
now so little believed that geologists are spared the pains of
proving that nature ever deals in fragmentary creations of any
sort. All of our valleys are clearly fragmentary in some degree.
Fig. 3
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Fig. 4
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Fig. 3 is a section across Yosemite Valley from Indian Cañon,
which displays the stumps of slabs and columns of which the granite
is here composed. Now, the complements
of these broken rocks must have occupied all, or part, or more
than all of the two portions of the valley, A C D and B E F. The
bottom, A B, is covered with drift, but we may assume that if
it were laid bare we would find it made up of the ends of slabs
and columns like the sides, which filled the space A C E B; because
in all valleys where the bottom is naked, the broken stumps
do
appear, showing that this valley was not formed by a fold
in the mountain surface, or by a splitting asunder, or by subsidence,
but by a breaking up and translation of rocks which occupied its
place, or, in other words, by erosion.
Fig. 4 is a section across the lower portion of the valley of
Illilouette south of Mount Starr King. In this case the bottom
is naked, and the dotted reconstructed portions of the huge granite
folds A B C D have
evidently been eroded.*
[* Water never erodes a wide U-shaped valley in granite, but
always a narrow gorge like E F, in Fig. 4.]
Even the smoothly curved trough of two
rock-waves which afford sections like Fig. 5 can not be regarded
as a valley originating in a fold of the surface, for we have
shown in the first paper of this series that domes or extended
waves, with a concentric structure like A C, may exist as concretionary
or crystalline masses beneath the surface of granite possessing
an entirely different structure or no determinate structure whatever,
as in B.
Fig. 5
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Fig. 6.--Illustrating Bend of Upper Tuolumne Valley
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The chief valley-eroding agents are water and ice. Each has
been vaguely considered the more influential by different observers,
although
the phenomena to which they give rise are immensely different.
These workmen are known by their chips, and only glacier chips
form moraines which correspond in kind and quantity to the size
of the valleys and condition of their surfaces. Also their structure
unfolds the secret of their origin. The constant and inseparable
relations of trend, size, and form
which these Sierra valleys sustain to the ice-fountains in
which they all head, as well as their grooved and broken sides,
proclaim the eroding force to be ice. We have shown in the second
chapter that the trend of Yosemite valleys is always a direct
resultant of the forces of their ancient glaciers, modified by
obvious peculiarities of physical structure of their rocks. The
same is true of all valleys in this region. We give one example,
the upper Tuolumne Valley, which is about eight miles long, and
from 2,000 to 3,000 feet deep, and trends in a generally northerly
direction. If we go to its head on the base of Mount Lyell, and
follow it down, we find that after trending steadily about two
miles it makes a bend of a few degrees to the
left (A, Fig. 6). Looking for the cause, we perceive a
depression on the opposite or right wall; ascending to
it, we find the depression to be the mouth of a tributary valley
which leads to a crater-shaped ice-fountain (B) which
gave rise to the tributary glacier that, in thrusting itself into
the valley trunk, caused the bend we are studying. After maintaining
the new trend thus acquired for a distance of about a mile and
a half, the huge valley swerves lithely to the right at
C. Looking for the cause, we find another tributary ice-grooved
valley coming in on the left, which like the first conducts
back to an ice-womb (D) which gave birth to a glacier that
in uniting with the trunk pushed it aside as far as its force,
modified by the direction, smoothness, and declivity of its channel,
enabled it to do. Below this, the noble valley is again pushed
round in a curve to the left by a series of small tributaries
which, of course, enter on the right, and with each change
in trend there is always a corresponding change in width or depth,
or in both. No valley changes its direction without becoming
larger. On nearing the Big Meadows it is swept entirely round
to the west by huge glaciers, represented by the large arrows,
which descended from the flanks of Mounts Dana, Gibbs, Ord, and
others to the south. For thirty miles farther, we find everywhere
displayed the same delicate yielding to glacial law, showing that,
throughout the whole period of its formation, the huge granite
valley was lithe as a serpent, and winced tenderly to the touch
of every tributary. So simple and sublime is the dynamics of the
ancient glaciers.
Every valley in the region gives understandable evidence of having
been equally obedient and sensitive to glacial force, and to no
other. The erosive energy of ice is almost universally underrated,
because we know so little about it. Water is our constant companion,
but we cannot dwell with ice. Water is far more human than ice,
and also far more outspoken. If glaciers, like roaring torrents,
were endowed with voices commensurate with their strength, we
would be slow to question any ascription of power that has yet
been bestowed upon them. With reference to size, we have seen
that the greater the ice-fountains the greater the resulting
valleys; but no such direct and simple proportion exists between
areas drained by water streams and the valleys in which they flow.
Thus, the basin of Tenaya is not one-fourth the size of
the South Lyell, although its cañon is much larger.
Indeed, many cañons have no streams at all, whose topographical
circumstances are also such as demonstrate the impossibility of
their ever having had any. This state of things could not exist
if the water streams which succeeded the glaciers could follow
in their tracks, but the mode and extent of the compliance which
glaciers yield to the
topography of a mountainside, is very different from that yielded
by water streams; both follow the lines of greatest declivity,
but the former in a far more general way. Thus, the greater portion
of the ice-current which eroded Tenaya Cañon flowed
over the divide from the Tuolumne region, making an ascent
of over 500 feet. Water streams, of course, could not follow;
hence the dry channels, and the disparity, to which we have called
attention, between Tenaya Cañon and its basin.
Anyone who has attentively observed the habits and gestures of
the upper Sierra streams, could not fail to perceive that they
are young, and but little acquainted with the mountains; rushing
wildly down steep inclines, whirling in pools, sleeping in lakes,
often halting with an embarrassed air and turning back, groping
their way as best they can, moving most lightly just where the
glaciers bore down most heavily. With glaciers as a key the secrets
of every valley are unlocked. Streams of ice explain all the phenomena;
streams of water do not explain any; neither do subsidences, fissures,
or pressure plications.
We have shown in the previous paper that post-glacial
streams have not eroded the 500,000th part of the upper Merced
cañons. The deepest water gorges with which we are
acquainted are between the upper and lower Yosemite falls, and
in the Tenaya Cañon about four miles above Mirror Lake.
These are from twenty to a hundred feet deep, and are easily distinguished
from ice-eroded gorges by their narrowness and the ruggedness
of their washed and pot-holed sides.
The gorge of Niagara River, below the falls, is perhaps the grandest
known example of a valley eroded by water in compact rock; yet,
comparing equal lengths, the glacier-eroded valley of Yosemite
is a hundred times as large, reckoning the average width of the
former 900 feet, and depth 200. But the erosion of Yosemite Valley,
besides being a hundred times greater, was accomplished in hard
granite, while the Niagara was in shales and limestones. Moreover,
Niagara cañon, as it now exists, expresses nearly the whole
amount of erosion effected by the river; but the present Yosemite
is by no means an adequate expression of the whole quantity of
glacial erosion effected there since the beginning of the glacial
epoch, or even from that point in the period when its principal
features began to be developed, because the walls were being cut
down on the top simultaneously with the deepening of its bottom.
We may fairly ascribe the formation of the Niagara gorge to its
river, because we find it at the upper end engaged in the work
of its further extension toward Lake Erie; and for the same reason
we may regard glaciers as the workmen that excavated Yosemite,
for at the heads of some of its branches we find small
glaciers engaged in the same kind of excavation. Merced cañons
may be compared to mortises in the ends of which we still find
the chisels that cut them, though now rusted and worn out. If
Niagara River should vanish, or be represented only by a small
brook, the evidence of the erosion of its gorge would still remain
in a thousand water-worn monuments upon its walls. Nor, since
Yosemite glaciers have been burned off by the sun, is the proof
less conclusive that in their greater extension they excavated
Yosemite, for, both in shape and sculpture, every Yosemite
rock is a glacial monument.
When we walk the pathways of Yosemite glaciers and contemplate
their separate works-the mountains they have shaped, the cañons
they have furrowed, the rocks they have worn, and broken, and
scattered in moraines--on reaching Yosemite, instead of being
overwhelmed as at first with its uncompared magnitude, we ask,
Is this all? wondering that so mighty a concentration
of energy did not find yet grander expression.
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