. Sierra Club bulletin . C. A. Lee. On certain rocks supposed to move without any apparent cause. American Journal of Science; Vol. 5, 1822, PP- 34-37, and Vol. 9, 1825, pp. Adams. Remarks on . . some phenomena of moving rocks . . American Journal of Science; Vol. 9, 1825, pp. 136-144- 234 Sierra Club Bulletin. Montgomery C. Meigs. On movements caused in large ice-fields by expansion and contraction. Bulletin Philosophical Society of Washington; Vol. 2, 1874-78, Appendix VII, pp. R. Buckley. Ice Ramparts. Trans. Wisconsin Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters; Vol. 13, Part


. Sierra Club bulletin . C. A. Lee. On certain rocks supposed to move without any apparent cause. American Journal of Science; Vol. 5, 1822, PP- 34-37, and Vol. 9, 1825, pp. Adams. Remarks on . . some phenomena of moving rocks . . American Journal of Science; Vol. 9, 1825, pp. 136-144- 234 Sierra Club Bulletin. Montgomery C. Meigs. On movements caused in large ice-fields by expansion and contraction. Bulletin Philosophical Society of Washington; Vol. 2, 1874-78, Appendix VII, pp. R. Buckley. Ice Ramparts. Trans. Wisconsin Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters; Vol. 13, Part 1, pp. 141-15/-J. P. Gustafsson. Om stranden vid nagra smaldndska sjoar. Geologiska Foreningens i Stockholm Fohandlingar; Vol. 26, h. 1, pp. Braun. Eiswirkung an Seenfern. Schriften der okonom. Gesellschaft zu Konigsberg i Pr. XLVII. Jahr- gang 1906. pp. 8-13. 1 1 f 31 ^^ ^¥%^^1 F « al 1 j|»l Mil jj.]., .,j;mH H M/swfcMZ -,? i mgmfe 3mL Mm m&i < JH 9 * 33 tttAWJm * Vi tjki K :^: V. ? t Grand Canons of Tuolumne and Merced. 235 THE GRAND CANONS OF THE TUOLUMNE ANDTHE MERCED. By Marion Randall Parsons. The Sierra Club camp for the Outing of 1907 hadbeen established in the Tuolumne Meadows more thana week before we started, seventy strong, on the tripinto the canon of the Merced, a region which none of ushad ever visited before. With a pack-train of twenty-animals we left camp early one morning, taking theLyell trail as far as Rafferty Creek, and there leavingit to follow an old sheep trail leading up its west bankto Tuolumne Pass. Near the top of the pass the trailemerges from the scattering forest of tamaracks into abroad meadow-land, walled on either side with snow-streaked mountains. Half a mile of boulder-strewn coun-try, still partly covered with snow, brought us to the baseof Vogelsang Peak, where the trail turns, crossing thedivide to the north of the peak and striking down thecanon of the McClure Fork. The McClure Fork rises in a grim, desolat


Size: 1794px × 1392px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidsierraclubbullet6108sier