THE STRANGE SERE BONES OF AN ANCIENT LANDSCAPE
A reflection on the dry landscape and living history of
the Panoche Hills
Photos and text by David Bacon
Earth Island Journal, 10/8/15
Interstate 5, running down the west side of the San
Joaquin Valley, California cuts a dividing line between the flat valley floor
and dry hills rising to the west. Passengers in thousands of cars and trucks,
seemingly desperate to pass by as quickly as possible on the highway to Los
Angeles, can look east over a landscape of huge fields and orchards. On a clear day, when the wind sweeps away the
valley's omnipresent dust, you can see the Sierras.
To the west, though, the land is hidden behind a
succession of eroded ridges. Beyond them rises the strange, sere landscape of
the Panoche and Griswold Hills.
Today California is dry, in the throes of a four-year
drought. Even in more "normal" times in the past, however, these
hills were as dry as the rest of the state is now. You can feel it, reaching
down and crumbling the soil in your hands. It is a dryness that perhaps
predicts what we will soon see elsewhere.
This is grazing land. Narrow blacktop roads snake up from
the valley floor past old barns and fences. The cattle have worn grooves and
paths that meander horizontally across worn hillsides. Some are covered in
stubble, while others have no remnants of grass at all. Then, cutting down
across their face are the old watercourses. Now they're dry, but their dramatic
vertical sides testify to the power of the flash floods that, in a rare heavy
rain, carry away the rocks and thin soil.
The San Joaquin Valley floor to the east is largely made
up of the sediment washed down Panoche Creek and its tributaries. On the creek
bottom, trees and a few isolated homes are patches of green in a brown vista
that stretches for miles. But everything here speaks of the lack of water.
A small field of grapevines or berries, now dry, is a
memory of some effort to seek out an income beyond a ranch's animals. A fence
line stretches up into hills bleached blindingly white. Another fence, like
those in Mexico's Sonora desert, is a barrier made of thin dry cactus branches
tied together. The sky's bright light shines through rusted bullet holes in an
ancient empty water tower.
The ranches here are small. But a century ago the cattle
on this land belonged to Henry Miller, one of California's original cattle
kings. He got it from Daniel Hernandez whose title stretched back to an
original 22,000-acre land grant. In 1844 Mexican governor Manuel Micheltorena
awarded these hills to Julian Ursua and Pedro Romero, just before California
was taken by the United States in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848.
Before that, it was the land on which Northern Yokuts
were living. They had not yet discovered the joys of private ownership,
however, and when the recently canonized Father Junipero Serra arrived to set
up missions, they were in the way. They also made a ready source of labor. The
Yokuts were driven from these hills, and forced into servitude in the Missions
of San Jose, Soledad, and San Antonio. In the closest, Mission San Juan
Bautista, the graves of these Indigenous inhabitants lie in the shadows of the
church's thick, whitewashed adobe walls.
The Yokuts, or perhaps others who came before them, were
the first human arrivals in this landscape. If they came as early as 12,000
years ago, they might have seen the final retreating glaciers of the last ice
age. The icecap ended about here, in San Benito County. In the floods and
storms that followed as the climate warmed, whole mountains were washed into
the valley below, creating the soil that now feeds the world.
The Panoche and Griswold Hills are what remained. They
are the bones of an ancient landscape. In the Cretaceous period, 65 million
years ago, most of California was underwater. Only the highest mountains of the
present Coast Range then poked above the waves as islands. The bottom of this
inland sea became the graveyard of water-borne Mosasaurs and Plesiosaurs, along
with smaller dinosaurs and the ancestors of today's turtles. Sandstone is the
first layer of rock under the thin soil of these hills, and then, under that, the
Moreno Shale holds their bones.
The runoff from eons of erosion concentrated the minerals
leached from the rocks. Selenium
especially washed into Panoche Creek, and from there, into the San Joaquin
Valley below. It seeped into the land watered by the creek and others like it,
throughout the northern part of the Westlands. After World War II, huge canals
and irrigation projects were engineered to bring water to the valley's west
side, for the benefit of big landowners. But irrigating land with this history
had disastrous consequences.
Selenium, boron and other salts rose into the wastewater
runoff from irrigation. Growers built subterranean drains to pump the water
away, dumping it into the vernal ponds of the Kesterson wildlife refuge.
Selenium then caused migratory birds, on one of the world's main flyways, to
lay eggs with shells so thin they were crushed in their nests. The drain was
closed, but agriculture on the Westside goes on as before.
Above the flat valley the Panoche and Griswold Hills themselves
became home to endangered animals, including giant kangaroo rats, San Joaquin
kit foxes and blunt-nosed leopard lizards. Ironically, grazing helps to keep
them going, according to Mike Westphal, a biologist for the Bureau of Land
Management. "They only live where the land is bare," he told Sarah
Phelan of the Bay Nature website. "People used to think this land was being
overgrazed, but it's bare because it can't support anything. If we keep with the ranches, endangered
species and the ranches win."
The land is now in the sight of the fracking
industry. In 2012 BLM auctioned off
leases for oil exploration in the Monterey Shale, which extends into the
Panoche and Griswold Hills. Other dangers come from possible solar array
projects.
Yet this is a landscape that has always been in danger.
It is not the lush environment of the coast, with its fog and forests. Survival
of the land itself and the animals, plants and people on it seems to have been
precarious throughout its history.
It is austere. It is dry. It is dramatically beautiful.
No comments:
Post a Comment