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Recreation
and Places of Interest
Outdoor recreation
has long played an important part in
Californian life, and the state’s
numerous recreational facilities are
heavily used by both visitors and residents.
Many of these facilities are found in
the national parks, national forests,
state parks, municipal parks, and other
areas set aside for public use by the
federal, state, and local governments.
Lumbering, hunting, and fishing are
regulated in these areas, many of which
serve as preserves for the state’s
forests, wildlife, and other natural
resources.
National Parks
Among California’s
eight national parks are some of the
most frequently visited parks in the
country. Yosemite National Park covers
3,100 sq km (1,200 sq mi) of scenic
wild lands, including alpine wilderness,
three groves of giant sequoias, and
the glacially carved Yosemite Valley,
with its impressive waterfalls, cliffs,
and unusual rock formations. Sequoia
National Park, located in central California,
is home to the 84-m (275-ft) General
Sherman giant sequoia, considered the
most massive tree in the world. Its
circumference measured directly above
the ground flare is 25 m (83 ft). Some
of the world’s tallest trees grow
in the Redwood National Park in the
northwestern portion of the state. Joshua
Tree National Park has a representative
stand of Joshua trees and other desert
vegetation. More of California’s
dramatically beautiful landscapes can
be found in Kings Canyon National Park,
located in the Sierra Nevada and containing
two enormous canyons of the Kings River.
In stark contrast is Death Valley National
Park, which encompasses the lowest land
surface in the Western Hemisphere and
the place where the country’s
record high temperature was recorded.
Before the 1980 eruption
of Mount Saint Helens in Washington,
Lassen Peak, located in Lassen Volcanic
National Park, was the most recently
active volcano in the contiguous 48
states, erupting periodically from 1914
to 1921. Other signs of volcanic activity,
including cinder cones, lava flows,
lava tube caves, pit craters, and steam
vents, can be found in Lava Beds National
Monument, near the Oregon border, and
in the Mammoth Mountain area of the
eastern Sierra Nevada. Devils Postpile
National Monument, also near Mammoth
Mountain, contains lava columns up to
18 m (60 ft) high, and Pinnacles National
Monument, in the Diablo Range, has rock
spires, caves, and a variety of volcanic
features.
Five of the eight islands
in the Santa Barbara channel comprise
the Channel Islands National Park. A
portion of the park is under water and
provides habitat for marine life ranging
from microscopic plankton to the world’s
largest creature, the blue whale. Also
preserving a section of California’s
coastal environment is Point Reyes National
Seashore about 60 km (about 40 mi) north
of San Francisco.
Other national sites
commemorate the rich history of California.
Cabrillo National Monument in San Diego’s
Point Loma district marks the spot where
in 1542 Europeans first set foot upon
what is now California. Fort Point National
Historic Site, which is part of Golden
Gate National Recreation Area, contains
the fort built in the mid-1800s to prevent
any hostile fleets from entering San
Francisco Bay. San Francisco Maritime
National Historical Park contains a
square-rigged sailing ship, steam schooner,
three-masted schooner, steam tug, and
a paddle wheel tug.
Manzanar National Historic
Site, located in the southern Owens
Valley of eastern California, commemorates
the internment beginning in 1942 of
Japanese Americans during World War
II. The area from Manzanar south through
the Alabama Hills to Lone Pine with
the highest part of the Sierra Nevada
as a backdrop is one of the most popular
film-making locations in the world,
and now hosts the Lone Pine Film Festival
every October.
Eugene O’Neill
National Historic Site, in Danville,
commemorates the only Nobel Prize winning
playwright from the United States and
the architect of modern American theater.
One of the country’s
earliest crusaders for national parks
is remembered in two parks in California.
John Muir National Historic Site, in
Martinez, preserves the mansion where
the naturalist lived. Also recognizing
the explorer is Muir Woods National
Monument, in Marin County, a peaceful
grove of coastal redwoods.
National Forests
The 18 national forests
in California are administered by the
United States Forest Service. National
forests cover about 8.3 million hectares
(about 20.6 million acres). Within the
national forests are a number of wilderness
areas and wildlife refuges. Los Padres
National Forest, the largest national
forest wholly within the state, covers
688,000 hectares (1,700,000 acres) in
western California. Most of the other
larger national forests in California
lie in the northern and northeastern
parts of the state. Shasta-Trinity national
forest, in northern California, lies
in a volcanic area culminating in the
beautiful snowcapped Mount Shasta. In
the northern coastal uplands is Six
Rivers National Forest, noted for its
groves of redwoods. Extending across
the Sierra Nevada along California’s
eastern border are Plumas, Tahoe, Eldorado,
Stanislaus, and Inyo national forests.
Sierra National Forest, in the Sierra
Nevada region, preserves stands of giant
sequoias.
State Parks
The California state
park system includes about 128 units.
The largest in area is Anza-Borrego
Desert State Park, covering 243,000
hectares (600,000 acres) of desert and
mountain country in southern California.
Humboldt Redwoods State Park, in the
northwest, is the best known of the
several state parks that preserve some
of the tallest remaining stands of redwood
trees. Calaveras Big Trees State Park,
in the Sierra Nevada, is noted for its
fine stands of big trees. Point Lobos
State Reserve, south of Monterey, preserves
a rockbound stretch of the Pacific Coast,
which forms, with its varied wildlife,
a magnificent outdoor natural-history
museum.
Hearst San Simeon State
Historical Monument, nestled in the
wooded hills overlooking the Pacific,
midway between San Francisco and Los
Angeles, preserves the lavish residence
and estate of the former journalist
and publisher William Randolph Hearst.
Among the many California state parks
of historic interest is Columbia Historic
State Park, in the tiny village of Columbia
just north of Sonora. Columbia has been
preserved as a typical example of a
Mother Lode mining community during
the gold rush.
Other Places
to Visit
Among the most popular
of California’s other tourist
attractions are Disneyland, in Anaheim;
Sea World, on the coast near San Diego;
the motion-picture studios of southern
California; and Chinatown, in San Francisco.
Most of the early Spanish missions in
California have been preserved and at
least partially restored. The Santa
Barbara Mission, known for its fine
architecture, has been called the Queen
of the Missions. Of particular interest
to astronomers are California’s
Palomar Observatory and Mount Wilson
Observatory (see Hale Observatories),
and Lick Observatory, among the nation’s
major observatories.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia
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