The Resources of California: Comprising Agriculture, Mining, Geography, Climate, Commerce, &c., and the Past and Future Development of the StateA. Roman, 1863 - Всего страниц: 464 |
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Стр. 5
... winters ; but , in the drought of autumn , all those south of the Salinas are swallowed up in the sands before reaching the ocean . Most of them are con- stant streams to within ten or fifteen miles of their mouths . The Santa Ana , the ...
... winters ; but , in the drought of autumn , all those south of the Salinas are swallowed up in the sands before reaching the ocean . Most of them are con- stant streams to within ten or fifteen miles of their mouths . The Santa Ana , the ...
Стр. 12
... winters there are continuous sloughs , or pieces of marsh - like ground , from the Tejon to the San Joaquin . In the dry season , no channel is visible for the escape of the waters of Tulare and Kern Lakes . § 10. Rivers of the ...
... winters there are continuous sloughs , or pieces of marsh - like ground , from the Tejon to the San Joaquin . In the dry season , no channel is visible for the escape of the waters of Tulare and Kern Lakes . § 10. Rivers of the ...
Стр. 19
... winters are warmer ; the summers - especially at night - cooler ; the changes from heat to cold not so great nor so frequent ; the quantity of rain less , and confined principally to the winter and spring months ; the atmosphere drier ...
... winters are warmer ; the summers - especially at night - cooler ; the changes from heat to cold not so great nor so frequent ; the quantity of rain less , and confined principally to the winter and spring months ; the atmosphere drier ...
Стр. 20
... winter and summer . San Francisco is in the same latitude with Washington and St. Louis , but knows nei- ther the cold winters nor the hot summers which afflict those places . Ice is rarely formed in the Californian metropolis , and ...
... winter and summer . San Francisco is in the same latitude with Washington and St. Louis , but knows nei- ther the cold winters nor the hot summers which afflict those places . Ice is rarely formed in the Californian metropolis , and ...
Стр. 21
... winter months rarely have a day which is really comfortable in the open air ; while at least half the sea- son is so in San Francisco , the sky being clear , the sun warm , and the breezes gentle , so that the weather bears a strong re ...
... winter months rarely have a day which is really comfortable in the open air ; while at least half the sea- son is so in San Francisco , the sky being clear , the sun warm , and the breezes gentle , so that the weather bears a strong re ...
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abundant acre amalgam American amount Angeles auriferous average branches bushels California Cañon cattle cent claims clay climate coarse coast Coast Mountains color Colorado Desert Creek cultivated deep diameter dirt districts dollars eight favorable feet high feet long fifty five Fort Yuma four gold grain grape grows hills horses Humboldt Bay hundred feet inches long Indians Klamath Lake land largest lode Mariposa county miles long miles wide miners mining Mission grape mountains Napa nearly never pay-dirt placer mines plough population pounds quartz quartz-mills quicksilver rain rich riffle-bars River rock Sacramento River Sacramento valley San Francisco San Joaquin San Joaquin River sand Santa Clara Santa Cruz season Shasta side Sierra Nevada sluice soil sometimes Sonoma Spanish species spring stream summer thick thirty town trees Tuolumne twenty usually valley vaquero veins vines washing wheat wine winter Yuba
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Стр. 431 - America; bounded on one side by the Pacific Ocean, and on the other by a high range of mountains...
Стр. 138 - The great blue heron (Ardea herodias) is about four feet in length from the point of the bill to the end of the tail, and nearly six feet across the wings.
Стр. 197 - ... of the Atlantic States. This fact is significant of the remarkable adaptation of its climate and soil to the culture of the grape, and indicates that California will become the greatest wine country of the world. Mr. Hittel, in summing up its superiority...
Стр. 96 - Douglas spruce, (Abies doug. lasii) is a tree o£ very large size, growing to be three hundred feet high, and ten feet thick in the trunk. It is, as Dr. Newberry says, " one of the grandest of the group of giants which combine to form the forests of the West.
Стр. 392 - The acorns are gathered by the squaws, and are preserved in various methods. The most common plan is to build a basket with twigs and rushes in an oak-tree, and keep the acorns there. The acorns are prepared for eating by grinding them and boiling them with water into a thick paste, or by baking them into bread. The oven is a hole in the ground about 18 inches cubic.
Стр. 254 - ... hose is like the pipe of a fire-engine hose, though usually larger. Sometimes the pipe will be eight inches in diameter where it connects with the hose, and not more than two inches at the mouth ; and the force with which the stream rushes from it is so great, that it will kill a man instantaneously, and tear down a hill more rapidly than could a hundred men with shovels. One or two men are required to hold the pipe. They usually turn the stream upon the bank near its bottom until a large mass...
Стр. 124 - The general length from the tip of the nose to the root of the tail is about thirtyeight inches, and the height from the top of the shoulder to the sole of the foot, fourteen inches.
Стр. 162 - The farmers generally are anxious to make as much money as possible, and as soon as possible, without regard to the future value of the land.
Стр. 105 - Erodium cicutarium, (L'Herit). It is succulent, sweet, hardy, bearing clusters of spikes or pins an inch and a half long. These spikes have given it the name of Pin Grass; and the resemblance of its leaves to the geranium has suggested the name of "Wild Geranium.
Стр. vii - I write of her while she still offers a wide field for the adventurous, the enterprising, and the young, who have life before them, and wish to commence it where they may have the freest career, in full sight of the greatest rewards for success, and with the fewest chances of failure.