Although
most of the mountains in North America also face north and south, these
are different. Friction between Atlantic and Pacific tectonic plates pushed
the other American mountains upward, like a carpet being pushed against
a wall. But these Nevada mountains are the scars of stretching between
those plates - like the indentations made when you stretch a piece of
cellophane.
That all of this was once a muddy sea-bottom has yielded cathedrals of
sediment where there are no mountains, like the great Panaca formation
seventy-five miles from here. The Panaca is a loose scar of mud so cursed
by time and water that it has formed towers, pinnacles and peaks of dried
sediment. The sharp erosion has produced such narrow troughs that it has
formed winding cave-like passages - dark, cool, with a distinct hue of
blue. Rather out of this world, if not moonlike. Like the strange formations
in Red Rock Canyon, west of Las Vegas, or the odd elephantine structures
of the Valley of Fire along Lake Mead, all of Southern Nevada seems an
appropriate place for the imagination.