Recreation and Places
of Interest
Bright neon lights lead the way to Nevada’s
gambling and entertainment resorts, Las Vegas
and Reno. Both cities have numerous luxury high-rise
hotels and glittering gambling casinos. In addition,
Nevada has many historic and scenic attractions.
Scores of ghost towns stand as reminders of the
past. Nevada’s deserts contain spectacular
scenery and much of scientific interest, such
as the fossils and multicolored canyons. Recreation
in Nevada is largely associated with its mountains,
rivers, and lakes, where opportunities for seasonal
sports are numerous. Deer hunting and trout fishing
are popular, as is skiing, particularly at the
Slide Mountain-Mount Rose area and Charleston
Peak. Facilities for water sports and other activities
have been well developed at Lake Tahoe and Lake
Mead. Lake Tahoe, perhaps Nevada’s best
known scenic attraction, is also a popular winter
sport area.
National Parks and Forests
The federal government administers two national
parks, two national forests, and a national recreation
area, as well as wildlife and game refuges.
Great Basin National Park, in eastern Nevada,
contains 31,234 hectares (77,180 acres) of rugged
mountains, sagebrush deserts, and limestone caves.
The former Lehman Caves National Monument has
been incorporated into the park. Nevada shares
Death Valley National Park with California. Lake
Mead National Recreation Area, in the southeastern
part of the state, includes Mead and Mohave lakes
and Hoover Dam and covers parts of both Nevada
and Arizona. Red Rock Canyon National Conservation
Area, located west of Las Vegas, features multicolored
formations of the Red Rock escarpment, the Le
Madre Mountains, and the Calico Hills.
Humboldt National Forest, the only national
forest entirely within Nevada, encompasses more
than 1 million hectares (2.5 million acres).
This forest contains six wilderness areas, including
the 26,000-hectare (65,000-acre) Jarbidge Wilderness,
which contains rugged, glaciated terrain. Other
wilderness areas are Mount Moriah, Currant Mountains,
Quinn Canyon, Santa Rosa-Paradise Peak, East
Humboldt, and Ruby Mountains. In the forest,
Native American pictographs (drawings on boulders
or bedrock) and stone tools are uncovered at
archaeological sites in caves where ancient peoples
dwelled. In addition there are many caves of
interest to spelunkers and scientists. The mountainous
Toiyabe National Forest, in central Nevada, is
the largest national forest outside of Alaska.
Part of the forest is in California.
State Parks
The state maintains 23 parks and recreation
areas. It operates beach facilities at Sand Harbor
Beach at Lake Tahoe. Two of the monuments maintained
by the state are of historical interest: Mormon
Station State Historic Park, located in Genoa,
the earliest settlement in the state, and nearby,
the ruins of an Army post, Fort Churchill State
Historical Park, built in 1860. At Ward Charcoal
Ovens, near Ely, the state preserves the beehive-shaped
ovens that once produced charcoal used for smelting
ores. Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park near Gabbs
has fossils of ancient fishlike reptiles. The
striking desert scenery in the southeastern part
of the state is featured at Valley of Fire, Cathedral
Gorge, and Beaver Dam state parks, and at Walker
Lake State Recreation Area.
Libraries and Museums
Most Nevada libraries are small, and there are
just 23 systems in the state. Each year the libraries
circulate an average of 5.1 books for every resident.
The State Library and Archives in Carson City
provides reference and research services to the
state government, the state libraries, and citizens.
It collects state and federal publications, historical
publications dealing with Nevada and the West,
and statistical publications. The Nevada Historical
Society and the libraries of the University of
Nevada, including the Mackay School of Mines
DeLaMare Library, are in Reno. Museums operated
in conjunction with these libraries display objects
and materials of historical or geological interest.
The old United States Mint in Carson City has
been converted into the Nevada State Museum.
The tunnels in its basement show a mine in replica.
The National Automobile Museum in Reno includes
more than 200 historic vehicles. The Fleischmann
Planetarium is also in Reno. Las Vegas has a
natural history museum and the Lied Discovery
Children’s Museum.
Other Places to Visit
Other places of interest include Pyramid Lake,
named for the strangely shaped island within
it, and the active geysers and hot springs near
Beowawe. Faults, or cracks in the earth’s
surface, can be seen near Fallon. They resulted
from an earthquake in 1954. Lunar Crater, a large
basin near Lockes, was formed by the collapse
of a mountain peak in ancient times. Other well-known
attractions in Nevada are its ghost towns. Virginia
City, founded when the Comstock Lode was discovered,
boasted a population of 20,000 at its peak in
the 1870s but now has only about 900 people.
The nearby towns of Gold Hill and Silver City
have also languished. The Berlin-Ichthyosaur
State Park also features a ghost town. There
are many other such places scattered throughout
the state.
Source: MSN
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