Page:The National geographic magazine, volume 1.djvu/346

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National Geographic Magazine.

20 and 35 inches—for instance, in the valley of the Po, the classic land of irrigation, the annual precipitation is from 25 to 35 inches. There are none of these European irrigation regions where the rainfall is less than 10, and generally it is over 20 inches. But you will see that the most of the Californian irrigation regions have less than 15 inches, some less than 10, and the greatest rainfall of any large irrigable region in California is 18 inches, or, exceptionally, for smaller regions, 25 inches; while in Europe, the maxima are from 25 to 40 inches in countries where irrigation has long been practiced. It follows, then, that there is no place in Europe where it is so much needed as over a large part of California. Another reason why the necessity is felt in our Pacific Coast State, is found in the character of our soils; and not alone the surface soils, but the base of the soil—the deep subsoils. We have soils exceptionally deep; soils which extend below the surface to 50 feet, underlaid by loose sand and open gravels, so that the rainfall of winter is lost in them. The annual rain seldom runs from the surface. It follows that these lands are generally barren of vegetation without the artificial application of water.

Considering now the sources of water-supply: we have in the southern part of the State many streams which flow only for a few weeks after rainfall, and other streams which run two or three months after the rainy season. But there is not a stream in all California south of the Sierra Madre (except the Colorado, which has it sources of supply outside of the State) which flows during the summer with a greater volume than about 70 to 80 cubic feet per second—a stream 15 feet in width, 2 feet deep, and flowing at the rate of 2½ to 3 feet per second—a little stream that, in the eastern part of the continent, would be thought insignificant. The largest stream for six months in the year, in all southern California, is the Los Angeles river. The Santa Aña river, the next largest, flows from two sevenths to one third as much; the San Gabriel, the next largest, has perhaps two thirds or three fourths as much as the Santa Aña; and so, a stream which will deliver as much water as will flow in a box 4 feet wide and 1½ feet deep, at a moderate speed, during summer months, would be regarded as a good-sized irrigation feeder in that southern country. In the greater interior basin or central valley, we find other conditions. Here we have a different class of streams. The great Sierra Nevada receives snow upon its summits, which does not