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The Algodones Dunes from space. The Cargo Muchacho Mountains can
be seen in the upper part of the image, beneath the clouds. A
checkerboard pattern of farms in the Colorado River floodplain is visible on
the Mexican side of the border (far right); the image is rotated
about 50 degrees to the west.
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The Algodones Dunes is a large erg (sand dune field) located in southeastern
portion of the U.S.
state of California, near the border with Arizona and the Mexican state of Baja California. The field is
approximately 72 kilometers long by 10 kilometers wide (45 miles by
6 miles) and extends along a northwest-southeast line that
correlates to the prevailing northerly and westerly wind
directions. The name "Algodones Dunes" refers to the entire
geographic feature, while the administrative designation for that
portion managed by the Bureau of Land Management is
the Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation Area (sometimes
called the Glamis Dunes). The Algodones Dunes are
split into many different sections. These sections include Glamis,
Gordon's Well, Buttercup, Midway, and Patton's Valley. The Spanish word
algodones translates to the English word cotton.
Location
The dunes are located west of the Chocolate Mountains in Imperial County, and are crossed by Interstate Route 8 and State Route 78, which passes
through the old train stop of Glamis at the eastern edge of the
dune field. The northwestern end is located at 33°8′53″N 115°19′29″W / 33.14806°N
115.32472°W / 33.14806; -115.32472
about 18 km (11 miles) east of Calipatria, California, and the
southeastern end is located at 32°41′4″N 114°46′7″W / 32.68444°N
114.76861°W / 32.68444; -114.76861
near Los Algodones in Mexico about 10 km (six miles)
west of Yuma,
Arizona. The dunes are also now separated at the southern end
by agricultural land (see accompanying photo) from the much more
extensive Gran Desierto de Altar, to which
they once were linked as an extreme peripheral "finger". The only
significant human-made structures in the area are the All-American
Canal that cuts across the southern portion from west to east
and the Coachella Canal on the western edge.
History
Because the Colorado River flowed through very flat
terrain, the course of the river varied over a wide area, being
periodically diverted in one direction or another by silt deposits
remaining after floods. Sometimes the river flowed into the Gulf of
California, as it does today; other times it turned westward
toward the Salton
Sink. Each time the Salton Sink received the river flow, a
large freshwater lake called Lake Cahuilla formed. The last Lake
Cahuilla covered much of the Imperial, Coachella and
Mexicali Valleys as late as 1450. The most popular theory holds
that the Algodones Dunes were formed from windblown beach sands of
Lake Cahuilla. The prevailing westerly and northwesterly winds
carried the sand eastward from the old lake shore to their present
location which continues to migrate southeast by approximately one
foot per year.[1]
The dunes have frequently been a barrier to human movement in
the area. Foot travelers frequently diverted south into Mexico, and
in 1877 the Southern
Pacific Railroad was diverted north to avoid the dunes, but in
1915 Colonel Ed
Fletcher built a wooden plank road across the dunes to prove
that cars could cross the dunes and to connect San Diego with Yuma, Arizona. This trail eventually
became part of Interstate
8. During World
War II, the U.S. military conducted desert warfare training on
the dunes, which were part of the California-Arizona Maneuver Area.
People have been driving on the dunes for recreation almost since
vehicles first reached the area, which may have been the proving
ground for the first dune
buggy, a modified Ford Model A. Off-road driving surged
following World War II when surplus Jeeps became available to the public.[1]
Current
recreational use
Environmental protection groups (notably the Center for Biological
Diversity[2]) and
off-highway vehicle advocacy groups (notably the American Sand
Association[3])
have filed numerous petitions and lawsuits to either restrict or
re-open vehicular access to the dunes. Most of the dunes located
north of State Route 78 are off-limits
to vehicular traffic due to designation as the North
Algodones Dunes Wilderness. The federal government protected
these 25,818 acres (104 km²) in the early 1980s and closed them to
vehicles as part of the 1994 California Desert Protection Act
(Public Law 103-433). Much of the area south of this road remains
open for off-highway vehicle use, though a lawsuit in 2000 closed
over 49,000 acres (200 km²) to vehicular access, leaving about 40%
of the recreation area open to vehicles. The site's large sand
dunes are a preferred terrain for many off-road vehicle owners. Motorcycles, sandrails, ATVs,
and 4-wheel-drive vehicles are commonly driven across the
dunes. Open camping is permitted, and on major winter holidays,
as many as 150,000 people can visit in a single weekend.[4] These
recreationalists bring an economic boom during the cooler months to
the nearby towns of Brawley, California, Yuma, Arizona and
El
Centro, California.
Endemic
species
As they are the largest dune ecosystem in the United States,
there are many species which are endemic to the
Algodones system, so the region overall is biologically unique on a
global scale. The Algodones were once part of an even greater dune
system that now resides primarily in the Mexican state of Sonora, with a few extensions
also in southwestern Arizona, especially in the vicinity of Yuma. Accordingly,
it is likely that many of the species presently known only from the
Algodones also occur in the Gran Desierto de Altar in
Mexico, but this is difficult to ascertain without biological
surveys of the latter area.
- The perennial plant Peirson's Milkvetch aka
the "Milk Weed" (Astragalus magdalenae var. peirsonii) is
found in the Algodones and is listed as a threatened
species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act and as an
endangered
species under the California Endangered Species Act.[5][6] The
plant germinates only during years of sufficient rainfall. During
one such year, over 71,000 plants were found in the open areas of
the dunes, and it is suspected at least that many more in the
closed areas.[3]
Among insects, there are dozens of species found only in
Algodones or its neighboring areas, including:
- Pseudocotalpa andrewsi - (a scarab beetle)
- Pseudocotalpa sonorica - (a scarab beetle)
- Anomala hardyorum - (a scarab beetle)
- Megasoma sleeperi - (a scarab beetle)
- Trigonoscuta rothi rothi - (a weevil)
- Trigonoscuta rothi algodones - (a weevil)
- Trigonoscuta rothi imperialis - (a weevil)
- Trigonoscuta rothi punctata - (a weevil)
- Lepismadora algodones - (a buprestid beetle, the only member of its
genus)
- Agrilus harenus - (a buprestid beetle)
- Prasinalia imperialis - (a buprestid beetle)
- Microbembex elegans - (a Sand wasp)
- Stictiella villegasi - (a Sand wasp)
- Plenoculus n. sp. - (a crabronid wasp)
- Perdita glamis - (an andrenid bee)
- Perdita algodones - (an andrenid bee)
- Perdita frontalis - (an andrenid bee)
- Euparagia n. sp. - (a vespid wasp)
- Dasymutilla nocturna - (a velvet ant)
- Efferia macroxipha - (a robber fly)
In August 2006, Federal wildlife officials decided not to list
these species under the Endangered Species Act, due primarily to
insufficient documentation of their distribution and phenology; biological
survey work is planned to address this.[7]
Movie
setting
The dunes were used to film parts of Road to
Zanzibar, Flight of the
Phoenix,Stargate, Resident Evil:
Extinction and the Tatooine scenes in Return of the Jedi.
References
External
links
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Protected Areas of
California |
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Carnegie
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