This is a guide through the eco-regions and down the scenic byways of the state's natural world, from grasslands to mountains to deserts, focusing on some of the most interesting landscape features and the plants and wildlife found therein. The six eco-regions include the Chihuahuan Desert, bordering Mexico; the Great Basin Desert, spilling over from Nevada, Utah, and Arizona; the Great Plains Grassland covering the eastern prairies; the Great Basin Grassland occupying the middle Rio Grande Valley westward; the alpine montane forests of the Sangre de Cristo and Sandia Mountains; and the piñon-juniper woodlands scattered throughout the mountain bases. New Mexico is third among states of greatest natural diversity, exceeded only by Texas and California. The elevation ranges from 2,842 feet where the Pecos River flows out of New Mexico to 13,161 at the snowy summit Wheeler Peak. A gamut of geological substrates and soil types provide a wide range of growing conditions for plants. More than nine-tenths of New Mexico's land remains in native or near-native condition, unchanged by human hands. This "living landscape" is wonderfully varied, ranging from vast rose-colored deserts that contrast with expanses of native grasslands, endless mesas and escarpments, fresh black lava flows, river valleys, and rugged mountains. This colorfully illustrated book provides readers with an understanding of the natural elements that define the environments of New Mexico and directs road travelers to some of their more interesting features.
276-9 , 403-3 ) ; William Richard Cutter , Genealogical and Personal Memoirs relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts ( N.Y. , 1908 ) , II , pp . 867-69 ; William Bentley , The Diary of William Bentley ...
The California Pacific Company began the construction of a new bridge on the Howe truss pattern, October 2, 1869, ... the Southern Pacific Company and the counties of Yolo and Sacramento built a bridge jointly at the foot of H street.
“ Beavertooth ” Neal was a beaver poacher of such guile and industry that he has since become a kind of folk hero . He used various devices to slip his illegal pelts by officers . One was to found the “ Leader Fur Company ” of Elk ...
RESTORATION AS CONSERVATION Restoration and preservation have sometimes been cast as philosophically opposed approaches to conservation ( Kane 1994 ) . However , one unifying theme is the recognition that neither restoration nor ...
A moment-by-moment account of the 1906 earthquake and the fire that followed it, using new source material and many eyewitness reports.
For more than a century the history of the American Frontier, particularly the West, has been the speciality of the Arthur H. Clark Company.
... 364 Bryan, Elizabeth, 87 Bryan, John Neely, 269 Bryant, Benjamin Franklin, 174, 197, 203, 309–10,313,316,364 Bryant, Jesse, 197, 313, 316, 364 Bryant's Station, 315 Bryant, William, 313, 364 Brymer, 296 Bryson, Thomas, 18 Buchannon, ...
“ The Methodology of Evaluation . ” In Perspectives on Curriculum Evaluation , edited by R. W. Taylor , et al . Skokie , Ill .: Rand McNally , 1976 . Segal , Steven P. “ Issues in the Utilization and Evaluation of Social ...
In the 1970s, the world's largest construction companies invaded Alaska in a wild rush to build the 800-mile $8 billion trans-Alaska pipeline. Workers by the tens of thousands headed north,...
Advance Praise for 47 Down "A gripping mystery story: Will the men trapped deep underground in a mine by fire be reached by rescuers in time? And why do these...