Page:The National geographic magazine, volume 1.djvu/344

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National Geographic Magazine.

I am specially acquainted. I apprehend that although many gentlemen present have a far-reaching and definite appreciation of the subject at large, many others do not appreciate the value and importance of irrigation. In the arid parts of California (for we do not admit that California is as a whole arid) it is a vital matter. There it is a question of life, for the people. Not more than one-sixth of the tillable area in the State can sustain a really dense population, without irrigation; two thirds of it will not sustain even a moderate population, without irrigation; while one third will not sustain even a sparse population, without such artificial watering. Think well over these facts. They are very significant. I doubt whether they are generally appreciated in California itself.

I have no doubt many persons are familiar with the geography of the State, but, doubtless, some are not. California has a coast line of 800 miles and a width of from 140 to 240 miles. It is traversed almost throughout its length by a great mountain chain extending along near the eastern boundary, which is called the Sierra Nevada, and by a lesser range, more broken and less unified, running parallel to the coast, called the Coast Range, the southern extension of which, after joining the Sierra Nevada, is called the Sierra Madre, and at the further extremity, the San Jacinto and San Diego mountains. Within the interior of the State, looked down upon by the Sierra Nevada on the east, and closed in by the Coast Range on the west, is the great interior basin—the valley of the San Joaquin and Sacramento rivers—forming a plain 450 miles long, with an average width of from 40 to 60 miles. Outside of the Sierra Madre in the southern part of the State, and within the Coast Range, is another interior valley, nearly 100 miles in length and from 20 to 30 miles in width, and outside of the Coast Range, and lying next to the ocean, is a plain whose length is from 60 to 70 miles, and width 15 to 20 miles. These three areas—the great interior valley, the southern interior valley, and the coast plain of the south—are the principal irrigation regions of the State. Numbers of smaller areas, as those in San Diego county, come in as irrigation regions of less importance, and the scattering valleys along the Coast Range farther north, as the Salinas, etc., will come forward in the future as important irrigable districts of the State. Still further north, in the interior, there are the great plains of Lassen and Mono counties, and some scattering valleys in Shasta county, where