Title:
Letter from [John Muir] to [Jeanne C. Carr ], [1871 Fall ?].
Creator:
[John Muir]
Publisher:
University of the Pacific Library Holt-Atherton Special Collections. Please contact this institution directly to obtain copies
of the images or permission to publish or use them beyond educational purposes.
Contributor:
[Jeanne C. Carr ]
Date:
[1871 Fall ?]
2008
Type:
Text
Format:
Image/jpeg2000
Identifier:
muir02_0628-md-1
Source:
Original letter dimensions: 33 x 21.5 cm.
Language:
eng
Coverage:
[Yosemite]
Rights:
Copyrighted
The unpublished works of John Muir are copyrighted by the Muir-Hanna Trust. To purchase copies of images and/or obtain permission
to publish or exhibit them, see
http://library.pacific.edu/ha/forms
Muir-Hanna Trust
1984
Transcription:
Letter 90 To Mrs. Ezra S. Carr Autumn, 1871 ...The bottom portion of the foregoing section, with perpendicular sides is
here about two feet in depth and was cut by the water. The Nevada here never was more than four or five feet deep, and all
of the bank records of all the upper streams say the same thing of the absence of great floods. The entire region above Yosemite
and as far down as the bottom of Yosemite has scarcely been touched by any other denudation than that of ice. Perhaps all
of the post-glacial denudation of every kind would not average an inch in depth for the whole region. Yosemite and Hetch
Hetchy are lake basins filled with sand and the matter of moraines washed from the upper canyons. The Yosemite ice in escap-
ing from the Yosemite basin was compelled to flow upward a considerable height on both sides of the bottom walls of the Valley.
The canyon below the Valley is very crooked and very narrow, and the Yosemite glacier flowed across all of its crooks, and
high above its walls without paying any compliance to it, thus Drawing The light lines show the direction of the ice current.
In going up any of the principal Yosemite streams lakes in all stages of decay are found in great abundance regularly becoming
younger until we reach the almost countless gems of the summits with scarce an inch of carex upon their shallow sandy borders,
and with their bottoms still bright with the polish of ice. Upon the Nevada and its branches there are not fewer than a hundred
of these glacial lakes from a mile to a hundred yards in diameter, with countless glisten- ing pondlets not much larger than
moons. All of the grand fir forests about the Valley are planted upon moraines and from any of the mountain tops, the shape
and extent of the neighboring moraines may always be surely determined by the firs growing upon them. Some pines will grow
upon shallow sand and crumbling granite, but those luxuriant forests of the silver firs are always upon a generous bed of
glacial drift. I discovered a moraine with smooth pebbles upon a shoulder of the South Dome, and upon every part of the Yosemite
upper and lower walls. I am surprised to find that water has had so little to do with mountain structure here. Whitney says
that there is no proof that glaciers ever flowed in this valley, yet its walls have not been eroded to the depth of an inch
since the ice left it, and glacial action is glaringly apparent many miles below the Valley.