Page:The National geographic magazine, volume 1.djvu/356

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National Geographic Magazine.

southern part of the State, is held at values ranging from $500 to $5000. Such a little stream has changed hands at $5000, and not at boom prices either. In the interior prices are much less, being from about a quarter to a tenth of those in the far southern part of the State.

Fully one fourth of the United States requires irrigation. When I say that, I mean that fully one fourth the tillable area of our country requires irrigation, in order to support such a population as, for instance, Indiana has. The irrigated regions of Italy support populations of from 250 to 300 people to the square mile; of south France, from 150 to 250 people to the square mile; of southeast Spain, from 200 to 300. When we have 50 to 100 to the square mile in an agricultural region we think we have a great population.

The great interior valley of California will not support, without irrigation, an average of more than 15 to 20 people per square mile. Irrigate it and it will support as many as any other portion of the country—reasonably it will support 200 to the square mile. I have no doubt that the population will run up to ten or twelve millions in that one valley, and there are regions over this country from the Mississippi to the Pacific, millions of acres, that can be made to support a teeming population by the artificial application of water. And why has it not been done before? Simply for the reason that there is a lack of knowledge of what can be done and a lack of organization and capital to carry out the enterprises.

The government has recently placed at the disposal of the United States Geological Survey an appropriation for the investigation of this subject, to ascertain how irrigation can be secured, the cost of irrigation works, and point out the means for irrigation, in the arid regions. It is one of the wisest things Congress ever did; wise in the time and in the subject. The time will soon come when the question would have been forced upon the country, and the wisdom of preparing for that time cannot be too highly commended.