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Show CHAP. VI. CLIMATE OF UTAH TERRITORY. 275 Another curious geographical peculiarity of the Territory is the formation of the mountains. For the most part the ridges, instead of presenting regular slopes, more or less inclined, are formed of short but acute angular cappings superimposed upon flatter prisms. It often happens that after easily ascending two thirds from the base, the upper part suddenly becomes wall-like and insurmountable. Utah Territory is situated in the parallel of the Mediterranean; the southern boundary corresponds with the provinces along the Amoor lately acquired by Eussia, and with Tasmania in the southern hemisphere. But the elevation, that grand modifier of climate, renders it bleak and liable to great vicissitudes of temperature. The lowest valley rises 4000 feet above sea level; the mountains behind Great Salt Lake City are 6000 feet high; Mount Nebo is marked 8000, and the Twin Peaks, that look upon the "Happy Valley,"«were ascertained barometrically by Messrs. O. Pratt and A. Carrington to be 11,660 feet in height: in the western part of the Territory the Sierra Nevada averages 2000 feet above the South Pass, and it has peaks that tower thousands of feet above that altitude. These snowy masses, in whose valleys thaw is seldom known, exercise a material effect upon the climate, and cause the cultivator to wage fierce war with the soil. The air is highly rarefied by its altitude. Captain Stansbury's barometrical observations for May, June, July, and August, give as a maximum 27-80 at 9 A.M. on the 4th of August, and minimum 22'86 at sunrise on the 19th of June, with a general range between 25° and 26°. New-comers suffer from difficulty of breathing ; often after sudden and severe exercise, climbing, or running, the effect is like the nausea, sickness, and fainting experienced upon Mont Blanc and in Tibet; even horses feel it, and must pass two or three months before they are acclimatized.* * Subjoined is an abstract of meteorology kindly forwarded to me by Judge Phelps: " Great Salt Lake City, Utah, Oct. 24th, I860. "DEAK SIR,-The following is an abstract of meteorological observations for the past year, from October, 1859, to October, 1860, inclusive: Yearly mean of barometer 25-855 Highest range 26-550 Lowest range 25-205 Thermometer attached (mean) 60° Thermometer (open air) " 71° Thermometer, dry bulb " 64° Thermometer, wet bulb " 58° (All Fahrenheit.) "The amount of fair days, 244. The remaining 121 were 31 stormy and the residue cloudy and foggy. "The course of the wind more than two thirds of the year goes round daily with the sun; strongest wind south; worst for stock, north. "Highest range of the thermometer, 96° in July; lowest range in December- 22° below 0. "The amount of snow and rain water was 12-257, which is somewhat over 1 foot. |