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Page 25 text:
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Road To Somewhere-and Somewhere Is Zion Dam WAYNE mxvrs a4Wi7lI6T Sneaked In When The Ioslouas Weren't Looking ART RILEY fllrisflpoo, Qs Jlmgoma Arizona is a lot of things to a lot of people. There is a lot of Arizona, 113,956 square miles of it, and everyone of those square miles has something to offer, and each square mile is different from the next. At its greatest length the state is 391 miles long, east and west, at its greatest width, it is 337 miles wide. A lot of very interesting and diversified scenery and terrain is crowded within those dimensions. It spreads out in all directions and it goes up and down in just as merry a manner. In elevation, the state varies from 137 feet above sea level, near the Mexican border southwest of Yuma, to Humphreys Peak in the San Fran- cisco range near Flagstaff, which pokes its often snowcapped pate 12,655 feet into the air. Within the low and high points of Arizona are three general geographical regions: typical desert in the Southwestern part, a forested mountain region in the central and eastern parts, and the high, wind-swept
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Page 27 text:
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1 ' - X, .M ,W . Y ' f., - .W i . -t f - .iw .445 -5 , T.-. .. Q Q.. . . gf .t Q 4, '50 NT ,,,,h,,,W . , W at 1-3: , ,L Aff' M..a....,P:. an .rX,ME:,,WiiqWM V. ,X gif ia.: X . J . N' t, .:,i,?,,,,f,. MAL ,pe , LY .aaa t. . +5 ,,,,,, 2sM3..x W W M,,,.,,. 5 mt - ' at ' , 3, ,a.1. rg .aw-'il . ,h Q .t . f ' we . .' lf ' V WWC 'F V . . fffr:,a1t51 V' -s -f -- me , , ' V 3-tmp' ' f- 1 rv ,,, .J- ' -.Fl ' qty:-.fi -,,w..:i a ' if gfj. 'im Q' w ' l . 1 1 A to ' , an i Y , 1 if 'A 'Ng-'Fifi ,..-ny.-A fi- A .Ia ,,.- . . . p V V A ' ' A .,, t . ,fe 1 , . L., r., I , rr - , wg i H .K V K , I. -A? WA a. .. . ,. V . J, I .., , -- ' ,, ,N ia. ' 'aa V k W ' V A. T' W -- ag,--'v in MM, ., .Q r I A : W aww, va. ,viii-,, .ax -gr-fi Q . f rr 1-' - - , ' I , 'f Q , My .'. yr' . if Q, ' A t af, EP .1 , we-9 ., A X :Al .A if . , ,Q W .fr ,t r ' . ' V.. ,,. A .4 ,M , L 1, . ,- , ,axqfw K X: .t 9. K A at Q ' , - ,, L . ,, Q Q. M., . 4'Tl:vi1'sty Cattle In The Thirsty Land CHUCK Amsorr plateau region to the northeast. Variety, indeed, puts spice in our terrain. Whims of elevation in Arizona also acccount for the whims of our weather. Rain- fall varies from five to seven inches annually in the desert regions fthat is, when and if it rains? to twenty or more inches of precipitation annually in the high mountain country. Summer temperatures in the desert are high and soaring, moderate in the mountains. Desert winters are mild-mannered, mountain winters are often frigid and fretful. The plateau region can bake in summer, turn bitterly cold in winter. Climate- wise, we have everything from hot soup to nuts a la mode. Nature is no laggard, either, in adjusting her plant life to the different climates and different terrains which make up Arizona's many faceted personality. Nature's story in this state is a bulging book covering everything from cactus to the Ponderosa pine, from palo verde, catclaw and mesquite to the tall, serene spruce, monarch of the high, soaring mountains. Arizona is people, too, and the record of their occupancy of this glamorized real estate. Twenty thousand years of man's life here have been delved into by the inquir- ing anthropologist and archeologist. These years begin with the epoch of the Cochise Man, extend through' the lives and times of the Anasazis and the Hohokams, and take in the arrival of the ancestors of our modern Indian tribes. Arizona, to many people, is the remnants of the ancient ones and the vanished ones - such as Betatakin in Navajo National Monument, White House Ruins in Canyon. de Chellyg Walnut and Wupatki near Flagstaff, Montezuma Castle in the Verde Valley, Casa Grande near Coolidge, Tonto Ruins, just oil the Apache Trail, between Mesa and Miami, and Ven- tano Caves, in the desert south of Tucson. The gallant conquistadores of Spain and the faithful priests who accompanied them also left their marks in the land. San Xavier Mission and Tumacacori recall those proud days of Spain's ascendancy over the newly-discovered lands of the western hemisphere. ,
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