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Your National Parks, with Detailed Information for Tourists

Chapter 10 TREES AND FORESTS

Word Count: 525    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

roic realm. The trees grow to enormous size and are distributed and grouped with crags, meadows, terraces, ca?ons-all in unmatched wild, artistic charm and sublimity. Though some a

rdening extends over the g

Park. Other characteristic trees are the sugar pine, king of the pines; the Douglas sp

Merced and Tuolumne groves are near the western boundary of the Park, several miles north of El Portal Station, while the Mariposa Grove is in the southw

has a diameter of nearly thirty feet and a height of two hundred and four feet. Evidently it was once much taller; its top probably was wrecked by lightning. Through the Wawona tre

d a juniper; two silver firs; yellow, lodge-pole, and six other species of pines. Among the broad-leafe

rly two feet. The yellow pine rivals the sugar pine in size and grows from four to ten feet in diameter and from one hundred and fifty to two hundred and tw

plains change into a brown and sere desert; ... and have reached at length the westward slopes of the high mountain barrier which, refreshed by

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Your National Parks, with Detailed Information for Tourists
Your National Parks, with Detailed Information for Tourists
“Your National Parks, with Detailed Information for Tourists by Enos A. Mills”
1 Chapter 1 FIRE THAT MADE HISTORY2 Chapter 2 THE DISCOVERY OF THE YELLOWSTONE3 Chapter 3 THE GEYSERS, LAKES, AND STREAMS4 Chapter 4 AGES OF FIRE AND ICE5 Chapter 5 THE PETRIFIED FORESTS6 Chapter 6 AREA; TREES, FLOWERS, AND ANIMALS7 Chapter 7 ENTRANCES8 Chapter 8 ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY9 Chapter 9 KING TOPOGRAPHY10 Chapter 10 TREES AND FORESTS11 Chapter 11 PLANT LIFE12 Chapter 12 THE REALM OF FALLING WATER13 Chapter 13 SEEING YOSEMITE14 Chapter 14 FLOWER GARDEN15 Chapter 15 THE OLYMPIC NATIONAL MONUMENT16 Chapter 16 THE NATURAL BRIDGES AND RAINBOW BRIDGE NATIONAL MONUMENTS17 Chapter 17 WIND CAVE NATIONAL PARK18 Chapter 18 SULLY'S HILL NATIONAL PARK19 Chapter 19 CASA GRANDE RUIN RESERVATION20 Chapter 20 HOT SPRINGS RESERVATION21 Chapter 21 PLATT NATIONAL PARK22 Chapter 22 JASPER PARK23 Chapter 23 ROCKY MOUNTAINS PARK24 Chapter 24 YOHO PARK25 Chapter 25 WATERTON LAKES PARK26 Chapter 26 REVELSTOKE PARK27 Chapter 27 THE ANIMAL PARKS28 Chapter 28 LAWRENCE ISLANDS PARK29 Chapter 29 Keep the National Park Service absolutely separate from the Forest Service or any other organization.30 Chapter 30 The Palisades Inter-State Park is run without concessions. Why should private concerns reap profits by exploiting the visitors to National Parks 31 Chapter 31 LINE32 Chapter 32 LINE 3233 Chapter 33 THE WORK OF THE ICE KING34 Chapter 34 HIGH PEAKS35 Chapter 35 No.35