THE COVER
This month's cover sketch of the Douglas Fir is the first of a series
which will illustrate the cones and foliage of common Park trees.
MOUNT RAINIER--FINEST EXAMPLE OF HOW EARTH WAS BUILT
There is still a great deal that is not known, that will never be
known about the formation of this earth of ours, but the forces that
gave us the immediate surface upon which we live, the farm land and the
scenic features are still active and their processes can be
understood.
Nowhere are these active earth building forces and the results of
their labor more readily studied or easily understood than about Mount
Rainier.
Both the building up and the tearing-down action of these tools of
nature are readily observed. Both may be seen as they incessantly grind
away at the mill. Although the process is slow the results are
strikingly apparent.
Strange as it may seem construction takes place only as the result of
destruction, so both agencies are inseparably bound together in nature.
The result is a continuous movement; an endless circle of building up
and tearing down. There are no eternal hills, or eternal material
things of any sort in nature. Volcanic eruptions build up mountains;
glaciers tear them down; glaciers build up fertile valleys with the
finely ground sediment they have hewn from the hills; their streams tear
them down again and deposit the material in the sea; deltas are formed
and the earth is larger and the mountain is lower. The process is
endless.
Mount Rainier retains many of the characteristics of an active
building volcano. The course taken by the molten lava can still be
followed. The great flows can still be seen layer upon layer. A huge
mountain was formed to grace the landscape. Then, even before it
cooled, tremendous moving glaciers were created out of invisible
moisture in the air and they began immediately to carry the mountain
away. They are still at it. Even the short life of man sees great
changes wrought by the ice tools.
A cup full of glacial water leaves a quarter inch of sediment in the
bottom. Boulders are continually tumbling down the swiftly moving
stream. A fleet of 20,000 five-ton trucks, a string of trucks 80 miles
long, working for twenty-four hours could not haul as much material away
from Rainier as do her glaciers on any warm day in Summer.
Lower down where the descent is less rapid and the movement of the
streams consequently less violent this material is deposited and broad
valleys slowly form, which in turn will be cut away by the erosive
forces of nature.
And the interesting thing about it all is that a person standing upon
any of Rainier's vantage points can see and study the whole tremendous
process as it is constantly being enacted before their eyes. It is all
so close before them and so rapid in its action. A well planned and
carefully constructed working model could hardly tell the story
better.