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The Lost Ship of the Desert is the subject of legends about various historical maritime vessels having supposedly become stranded and subsequently lost in the deserts of the American Southwest, most commonly in California's Colorado Desert. Since the period following the American Civil War, stories about Spanish treasure galleons buried beneath the desert sands north of the Gulf of California have emerged as popular legends in American folklore.
A mountaineer, storm-stained and brown
from farthest desert touched the town
And, striding through the town held, up
Above his head a jewell'd cup.
He put two fingers to his lip,
He whispere'd wild, he stood a-tip,
And lean'd the while with lifted hand,
And said, "a ship lies yonder dead,"
And said, "Doubloons lie sown in sand
along yon desert dead and brown,"
The earliest tales of a lost Spanish galleon appeared shortly after the Colorado River flood of 1862. Colonel Albert S. Evans reported seeing such a ship in 1863. In the Los Angeles Daily News of August 1870, the ship was described as a half-buried hulk in a drying alkali marsh or saline lake, west of Dos Palmas, California, and 40 miles north of Yuma, Arizona. It could easily be viewed at a distance of several miles from a mesa that lay between Dos Palmas and Palma Seca, California. The stories have given Palma Seca other names: Soda Springs, Indian Springs, and Bitter Springs, as the area was not well mapped in 1870. Expeditions were sent out in search of her, but the ship had either never existed or had vanished into the sand and mud once again. The Galleon, according to legend, is now under the waters of the modern Salton Sea.[ citation needed ]
There are those[ who? ] who claim the ship is Thomas Cavendish's Content , filled with pirate plunder; others claim that she is the Iqueue , a ship of Spanish mutineers.
This legend may refer to the same ship as the Lost Galleon, but its own story has always placed it in a distinct location, closer to the sand hills west of El Centro, California. Descriptions suggest it is closer to the size of one of Christopher Columbus' small caravels. The pearl ship is rumored to have been seen as recently as the 1970s[ citation needed ].
The story goes that in 1615, Spanish explorer Juan de Iturbe embarked on a pearl-harvesting expedition, during which his crew sailed a shallow-drafted caravel up the Gulf of California. A high tidal bore carried him across a strait into Lake Cahuilla, a postulated contemporaneous saltwater basin periodically connected to the gulf which was already in the process of drying up permanently. After exploring the lake for several days, Iturbe found himself unable to sail out again, whereupon he beached his craft and made his way back to the nearest Spanish settlement on foot, leaving behind a fortune in black pearls. Sixteenth-century records from New Spain indicate that the De La Cadena family had a pearl-diving monopoly in Baja California.
Iturbe's alleged ship has been seen and lost several times, and there are several stories about it having been looted. A mule driver traveling with the de Anza expeditions through Alta California was said to have removed the pearls in 1774. In 1907, a farmhand named Elmer Carver noticed odd-shaped fence posts while working on Niles Jacobsen's farm in Imperial, California. Mrs. Jacobsen claimed a wind storm had revealed the remains of a ship, which the Jacobsens had repurposed into a fence. Mr. Jacobsen had also found gems which he sold in Los Angeles. [1]
The Viking stories originated around 1900 from the Mexicans and Indians who live in the Colorado River delta region near the Laguna Salada basin. The ship is consistently described as an open boat with round metal shields on its sides in the badlands west of Mexicali, Mexico.
Around 1933, Myrtle Botts, a librarian from Julian, California, had an encounter with an old prospector who reported seeing a ship lodged in the rock of Canebrake Canyon. He described the vessel as a Viking ship made of wood with a serpentine figure carved in its prow. He gave her and her husband directions to the location but an earthquake prevented the Botts from following the prospector's trail to the ship. [1] Julian's Pioneer Museum, which inherited Myrtle Botts' papers, also inherited those directions.
The Julian Pioneer Museum is not in possession of any records regarding the Viking ship mentioned in this story.[ citation needed ]
According to The Last of Seris (Dane Coolidge, 1939), the indigenous people of Tiburón Island reportedly encountered whalers visiting from far away, possibly a reference to Norsemen visiting the west coast of Mexico prior to the Spanish. [1]
This story grew out of an effort to explain or debunk the Lost Galleon story. It is thought that an abandoned ferry or steamboat that had broken away during a Colorado River flood and had been left dry in the vast sands of the river delta is the origin of the rumors. Others claim that it was a schooner that gold-seekers wishing to search the more inaccessible portions of the Colorado River had built in Los Angeles and hauled through the desert by a mule or oxen team until the animals perished, leaving the boat mired in soft sand.
The ferry boat story changed over time more often than the Lost Galleon story. One incarnation said that a small ferry (a two-man sweep) was built away from the river in a place a hundred feet or so above sea level, where a source of wood was found, and that a team of six (or more) oxen perished hauling it through the sand near Los Algodones. [2]
From a smattering of first-, second- and third-hand accounts, a variety of fictional (especially graphic and cinematic) variations of the Lost Ship stories have been created. Not surprisingly, the first-hand accounts are extremely rare. Many of the above references fit the Lost Mines and Urban Legends molds, where the story passes from ear to ear with all evidence disappearing along the way.
Searching for and finding the remains of a Lost Ship is now rather problematic. The greater part of the Salton Sink has been submerged under the Salton Sea since 1905, and much of the adjacent land is under military control and has even been used for bombing ranges, rendering on-the-ground searches highly hazardous and/or illegal.
Lands adjacent to Laguna Salada in Baja California, and between the Gulf of California and the Salton Sea, regularly receive wind-blown sand from the desiccated delta of the much-diverted Colorado River, generating vast sand dune systems. Aerial searches using ground-penetrating radar might reveal ships' remains, but there has not yet been an agency that undertook this project and revealed its findings. Whether or not any such ships actually existed, the legends persist and remain entertaining to many.
Around AD 1500, the lake was 26 times the present size of the Salton Sea. It has flooded and dried eight times between 1824 and 1905. In 1540 Spanish explorer Diaz was in the area, and by 1700 to 1750 the lake had infilled. Presently there is a "high ground" in Northern Mexico, of 23 feet, or 6+m. Thus a ship of 8 foot draft would need to have an additional 30 feet of water, above "sea level". While "king tides" of summer and winter are the highest, and conceivably a storm surge could add further water building up, wind-blown up the Sea of Cortez, 30 feet of additional depth seems highly unlikely.
This is a media timeline list of material related to the "lost ship" in the California desert; it shows how the story has changed in each generation's telling.
Note: Although most written items are a paragraph or more long, and sometimes lengthy articles, some are only a brief sentence or two in passing of what the author had heard and thought about a ship in the desert story.
1870 | The Galaxy, V.10, No.1, Jan. 1870 (New York newspaper) "In the Valley of the Shadow" by Albert S. Evans * Autumn of 1863 – Evans' horse died, leaving him to walk out from the Colorado Desert's Dos Palmas westward toward Palma Seca, where Evans saw the lost ship. |
1870 | Los Angeles News, Aug. 1870 (California newspaper) "Interesting Discovery" * Indians report a ship emerging from a drying alkaline marsh. |
1870 | Sacramento Union, Oct. 6, 1870 (California newspaper) "Dateline Los Angeles?" * Article about men from San Bernardino seeking the ship. |
1870 | Sacramento Union, Oct. 13, 1870 (California newspaper) "Dateline Los Angeles?" * Article about ship hunters returning without discovery. |
1870 | Sacramento Union, Nov. 16, 1870 (California newspaper) "Dateline Los Angeles?" * Article about new search for fossil boat. |
1870 | Proceedings of California Academy of Sciences, Nov. 21, 1870 (California journal) notes of regular monthly meeting * Albert S. Evans tells about the two different times he saw the ship; not a mirage, nor Martin Vise's oxen-hauled schooner. |
1870 | Chicago Tribune, Dec. 20, 1870 (Chicago, Illinois newspaper) "Finding of the desert ship" * report of a ship found on the Colorado desert |
1870 | San Bernardino Guardian, Dec. 31, 1870 (California newspaper) "The Search for the Lost Ship" * Joshua Talbot leaves Clusker party, having found nothing. |
1871 | San Bernardino Guardian, Jan. 14, 1871 (California newspaper) "Return of the Ship Prospectors" * The Clusker party returns, not having found the ship. |
1871 | Proceedings of California Academy of Sciences, July 3, 1871 (California journal) notes of regular monthly meeting * Author concludes based on correspondence that the ship is an optical illusion. |
1871 | Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, Oct. 21, 1871: P. 8-9 (Worcester, Massachusetts journal) notes of annual meeting * A report on what the California Academy of Sciences had previously reported. |
1872 | Sacramento Union, Sept. 30, 1872 (California newspaper) "Dateline Los Angeles?" * The "Arizona" desert ship proves to be a ferryboat. |
1873 | Inyo Independent, Sept. 27, 1873 (California newspaper) "? Lost Ship? " * James expedition found mast of ship. |
1873 | A La California: Sketches of life in the Golden State (book – chapter IX, p. 201) by Albert S. Evans, 1873 * Same as Evans' 1870 "Shadow of Death" newspaper account; this book was published after his death at sea. |
1874 | The Ship in the Desert (book of verse / poem) by Joaquin Miller, 1874 * The British edition is not quite the same as the American edition; Miller rewrote his poem. * Men battle over a beautiful Indian maiden; everyone dies at the ship in the desert. |
1875 | "The Ship in the Desert" (poem) by W. T. Grant & Pap Walker * The desert ship as a sort of Flying Dutchman in Death Valley. |
1878 | On the Frontier: Reminiscences of Wild Sports, Personal Adventures, and Strange Scenes (book, p. 244) by J. S. Campion, 1878 * Mission Indians & Monks of Lower California have a tradition of a wreck freighted with gold from Arizona – the Spanish "El Dorado" Author knew of two well-equipped expeditions that nearly perished of thirst while searching for the ship near Dos Palmas, California. |
1881 | Reminiscences of a Ranger, or Early times in Southern California (book, p.. 423) by Major Horace Bell, 1881 * Story about Joshua Talbot finding a mule-hauled boat built by Perry & Woodworth of Los Angeles. |
1886 | Chicago Tribune Sept. 12, 1886 (Chicago, Illinois newspaper) "Whence came the ship?" * A MYSTERY OF THE FAMOUS SO-CALLED COLORADO DESERT |
1886 | Atlanta Constitution Sept. 20, 1886 (Atlanta, Georgia newspaper) "The Stranded Ship" * a mystery of the famous so-called Colorado desert |
1886 | Boston Daily Globe, Sept. 26, 1886 (Boston, Mass. newspaper) "Whence the ship?" p. 17 * A Mystery of the Colorado Desert. Unsuccessful Effort of a Prospector to Examine the Hulk. A Padre's Theory that it May Have Been a Gold-Laden Galleon. |
1889 | American Notes and Queries, Sept. 14, 1889 (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, magazine) Ed. by William S. Walsh: "The Ship in the Desert" * Story about finding frame of small two-sweeper ferry boat that was hauled by half a score or more of bull-teams which mostly perished. |
1889 | Los Angeles Times, Oct. 6, 1889 (Los Angeles, Calif. newspaper) "The Ship of the Desert" * The Phantom ship of California |
1889 | Sandusky Daily Register, Nov. 16, 1889 (Sandusky, Ohio newspaper) "The Phantom Ship" * The hulk buried in the sands of the Colorado desert |
1890 | Atlanta Constitution, July 27, 1890 (Atlanta, Georgia newspaper) "A Ship of the Desert" by Paul Grant * a traveler had found in the desert of Colorado a dismantled ship |
1891 | Ohio Democrat, Jan. 8, 1891 (New Philadelphia, Ohio newspaper) * a Mysterious Vessel said to have been seen in the Colorado desert |
1891 | Galveston Daily News, Feb. 1, 1891 (Galveston, Texas newspaper) "A Ship in the desert" * Strange tale of a Spanish Galleon in Colorado desert. This article was printed nationwide and was the inspiration for John Blondelle Burton. |
1891 | The Standard, Feb. 10, 1891 (Ogden, Utah newspaper) "A ship in the desert" * Strange tale of a Spanish Galleon |
1891 | Los Angeles Times, Mar. 1, 1891 (Los Angeles, Calif. newspaper) "A ship in the desert" * Strange tale of a Spanish Galleon |
1892 | Manual of Geography (book, p. 95) by Jacques W. Redway, 1892 * In the sink of the San Felipe, or Conchilla, Valley, the ship is beyond doubt the frame of a ferry boat designed for the Colorado River. The teams dragging it to the river died. The ship's projector (promoter?) was living in 1885. |
1892 | Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society, 1892 (Great Britain journal) Jacques W. Redway: "New Lake in The Colorado Desert" * Blames the legend on Joaquin Miller, and refers to Maj. Horace Bell. |
1895 | The Ship in the Desert (book) by John Blondelle Burton, 1895 * Historical adventure fiction based on newspaper story. |
1909 | National Geographic Magazine, Aug. 1909 (U.S. magazine) W.C. Mendenhall: "The Colorado Desert" * mentions a widely published and graphic 1891 Lost Ship account. |
1916 | History of Arizona Book IV (book, p. 31) by Tomas E. Farish * Hassayamper is synonym for Arizonian Liar. |
1919 | Los Angeles Examiner, June 15, 1919 (Los Angeles Calif. newspaper) J.A. Guthrie: "Mystery of the Desert" * Tells Coahuilla Indian Chief Cabazon's version. |
1928 | Los Angeles Times, April 8, 1928 (Los Angeles Calif. newspaper) "The Lost Ship of the Desert" * It was that ole buzzard, 'Quartz' Warner, that swore by all the howling bobcats that he seen It. |
1933 | Journey of the Flame (book) by Walter Nordhoff under the pen name Antonio De Fierro Blanco * One of the most quoted sources for Pearl Ship stories. |
1939 | Desert Magazine , Jan. 1939 (Palm Desert, California magazine) Ed. by Randall Henderson: "Lost Ships: Fact or Fiction" |
1940 | Golden Mirages (book, p. 139) by Phillip Bailey, 1940 |
1941 | The Colorado Conquest (book) by David O. Woodbury, 1941 |
1941 | Death Valley Days (NBC radio broadcast) aired Jan 24, 1941, #533: "The Lost Pearl Ship" |
1942 | Marvel Mystery Comics #29, Mar. 1942 (U.S. comic book) Mickey Spillane: "The Ship in the Desert" * This was a short written story used as filler between comics, and locates a galleon near Willcox, Arizona |
1947 | Gold, Guns, & Ghost Towns (book, p. 164) by Walter Chalfant (aka Willie Arthur Chalfant), 1947 * Has story of the lost Pearl Ship of Juan de Iturbe |
1948 | Arizona Highways magazine, Apr. 1948 (Phoenix, Arizona magazine) article, p. 4: "The Ship in the Desert," by Norman G. Wallace * At the time the railroad was being built down the west coast of Mexico, engineer Bill Walters met with Papago Indian Juan Pablo (a.k.a. Khave the badger). Juan Pablo showed Bill pearls, china dishes, and gold coins taken from a ship half-buried in the sand hills of the Arizona mountain Pinacate. |
1949 | Chillicothe Constitution Tribune April 6, 8, and 9, 1949 (Chillicothe, Missouri newspaper) "Pop goes the queen": Newspaper serial story written by Bob Wade and Bill Miller * Fictional story of a murder involving an 18th-century Spanish treasure galleon, which sailed up the flooded Colorado river in 1744. |
1949 | Los Angeles Times, Aug. 1949 (Los Angeles, California newspaper) (see: June 8, 2003 Los Angeles Times) * Three UCLA students search for a Viking exploration ship blown off course. |
1950 | Action Comics #146, July 1950 (U.S. comic book) Joe Smachson: "Vigilante, The Galleon in the Desert" * Musical villain using fake desert galleon like a Trojan horse; caught by musical hero. |
1950 | Desert Rat Scrap Book , Packet #3, Pouch #3, 1950 ed. by Harry Oliver: "The Spanish Galleon At The Bottom Of The Salton Sea" |
1950 | Western Folklore, Vol. 9, No. 3, 1950 (Long Beach, California journal of Western States Folklore Society) "New Tales of American Phantom Ships" * Story is of an Elizabethan boat flying over the Colorado Desert near Indio, California. |
1950 | Dell Comics: 'Gene Autry Comics, Vol. 1, No. 39, May 1950 (U.S. comic book) "The Lost Galleon" * Story of how the Conquistadors lost a ship in the desert near Laguna Salada south east of San Diego |
1951 | Dell Comics: Gene Autry Comics, Vol. 1, No. 52, June 1951 (U.S. comic book) "Gene Autry and the Ship in the Desert" * Story has Autry finding ship in ancient river channel after a flash flood. |
1951 | The Indio Date Palm, Oct. 4, 1951 (Indio, California newspaper) Paul Wilheilm: "Paul Wilheim's Desert Column – A Ghost of the Vikings" |
1951 | Pioneer Cabin News (Nov. 1951 – Apr. 1952) (San Bernardino, California journal of the San Bernardino Society of California Pioneers) O.J. Fisk: "Story of the Pearl Ship in the Desert" |
1951 | Legendary and Geological History of Lost Desert Gold (book, p. 66) by Ralph L. Caine, 1951 |
1953- | San Bernardino Sun-Telegram, Feb. 15, 1953 (San Bernardino, California newspaper) L. Burr Belden: "The Lost Spanish Galleon" |
1953 | "Casey Ruggles," May 23, 1853 – Jan. 2, 1954 (syndicated daily U.S. newspaper cartoon strip) Warren Tufts: "The Pearl Galleon Episodes" |
1953 | The Calico Print , Nov. 1953 (Twenty Nine Palms, California magazine) Ed. by Harold & Lucille Weight: "Lost Ship in The Desert" |
1954 | ''Uncle Scrooge #7, Sept. 1954 (Walt Disney comic book) Carl Barks: The Seven Cities of Cibola (the story was originally untitled, while it was first titled in a 1967 reprint) |
1957 | Lost Treasures: The Search for Hidden Gold (book, p. 48) by Robert G. Ferguson, 1957 |
1959 | Bat Masterson, starring Gene Barry (NBC television program) original air date: July 15, 1959 |
1961 | Desert Rat Scrap Book , Packet #1 of Pouch #11, ed. by Harry Oliver "The Spanish Galleon Of Salton Sea", by Antonio de Fierro Blanco |
1962 | Suspense, starring Matt Cooper, Bill Adam, & Jean Gillespie (CBS Radio Program)
|
1962 | More Western Treasures (book) Jesse Rascoe, editor |
1962 | The Beckoning Desert (book) by Ed. M. Ainsworth, 1962 * Tells of the 1949 search for Joseph Ive's lost steamship. |
1963 | Lost Desert Bonanzas (book, p. 12) by Eugene L. Conrotto, 1963 * Written to mark 25 years of Desert Magazine's lost mine stories. |
1966 | Buried Treasures and Lost Mines of Southern California (book, p. 90) By Jack Black, 1966 |
1966 | Desert Magazine , March 1966 (Palm Desert, California magazine) D. Galbraith: "Lost Ships of the Desert" (??) |
1967 | California: a Guide to the Golden State (book, p. 461) by the Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration of Northern California, 1967 * Brief mention of 1890 old timer at Kane Springs claiming to have seen the ancient ship nearby. |
1967 | The Mysterious West (book) by Choral Pepper & Brad Williams, 1967 |
1968 | Dead Men do Tell Tales (book, p. 71) by Lake Erie Schaefer, 1968 |
1969 | True Treasure magazine (date of issue # unknown) (U.S. magazine) Ray Weiss: "Letter to the editor" * Ray wrote about a sighting by plane, and plans to search afoot. |
1970 | Saga's Treasure Special: Exclusive Guide to America's Fabulous Bonanzas Vol.1, #1, 1970 (book) chapter by Al Masters: "California's Fabulous Dune-Locked Pearl Galleon" |
1973 | Treasure Search magazine, Vo1 #1, 1973, p. 52 (Canoga Park, California magazine) Jeff Ferguson: "Pearl Galleon of the California Desert" |
1974 | Desert Magazine , April 1974 (Palm Desert, California magazine) Harvey Grey: "Phantom Ship of the Gran Desierto" |
1977 | Desert Magazine , March 1977 (Palm Desert, California magazine) Harold O. Weight: "Charley Clusker and the lost ship" * 1870s Clusker found a good way to acquire a grubstake. |
1977 | Lost Treasure magazine, July 1977, p. 58 (Grove, Oklahoma magazine) Al Masters: "Amazing Treasure Ship of the California Desert" |
1979 | Lost Treasure magazine, June 1979, p. 37 (Grove, Oklahoma magazine) Benito Villa: "Treasure ship in the Desert" |
1980 | Desert Magazine , Nov. 1980 (Palm Desert, California magazine) Choral Pepper: "Ships that Pass in the Desert Sands" |
1983 | Lost Treasure magazine, December 1983, p. 24 (Grove, Oklahoma magazine) Jack Peterson: "Was the Lost Ship of the Desert Found?" * Story from 1973: Paranoid hermit Lawrence Justice found ship with WWII military air photos of Imperial Valley. would not reveal location until getting government search permits in order. Justice died before finishing paperwork in late 70's. |
1984 | Treasure Found! magazine, Spring 1984, p. 26 "New Clues Surface to Three Fabulous Caches" * Article includes a story of George going to a remote location with a friend of Larry Justus, with photos of what could be part of the ship. Story also mentions the Viking Ship, and a group of wildflower enthusiasts who had seen it, and a Mexican who had taken one of the shields. |
1989 | Riverside Press-Enterprise, July 30, 1989 (Riverside, California newspaper) Tom Patterson: "Tales Persist of Viking and Chinese Ships Found in the Desert" |
1990 | Lost Treasure magazine, Aug. 1990, p. 30 (Grove, Oklahoma magazine) Michael Paul Henson: "California – Golden State Glitters with Gold – Spanish Ship" |
1991 | Lost Treasure magazine, Apr. 1991, p. 44 (Grove, Oklahoma magazine) B.G. Revis: "Treasure Ships of the California Desert" |
1992 | Columbus Was Last (book, p. 162) by Patrick Huyghe, 1992 * Tells of Vikings? exploring upper Gulf of California. |
1992 | Ghost Ship, starring Jay Robinson (movie) James T. Flocker, director * Teens find adventure in the desert. Not to be confused with the 2003 Warner Brothers movie with the same name. |
1993 | Traveler (a tile mural located at subway entrance to Union Station, Los Angeles, California) artist: Terry Schoonhoven * Far left corner of the mural shows a galleon in a desert. |
1995 | The Periscope (Coachella Valley, California Museum annual publication) "The Salton Sea, California's Overlooked Treasure" 1995, p. 9 |
1995 | Buried Treasures of California (book) by W. C. Jameson, 1995 * 1892 prospectors find mast of ship but no ship. |
1996 | Uncle Scrooge Adventures in Color #7, Aug. 6, 1996 (Disney comic book, p. 31) Geoffrey Blum: "Wind From a Dead Galleon" * Text filler has the story of what inspired the Carl Barks 1954 comic book. |
1997 | Little Known Tales in California History (book, p.. 30) by Alton Pryor, 1997 |
1998 | Classic Tales in California History (book, p 67) by Alton Pryor, 1998 |
1998 | Mysterious California (book) by Mike Marinacci, 1998 * Has a chapter on the lost ship, and a chapter on the Viking ship. |
1999 | Desert Lore of Southern California (book) by Choral Pepper, 1999 * Contains several ship legends including the Elmer Carver account. |
1999 | Book Again, Sept. 1999 (online newsletter, folklore section) Joe Nolte: "The Phantom Ship of the Salton Sea" * Mention of sighting by three German prospectors in 1878, and a sighting in Feb. of 1882. |
1999 | Great God Pan, The Champion of California magazine #13, 1999 (San Francisco, California magazine) Eric R. Blum "The Mysterious Lost Ship of the Desert" |
2000 | Lost Treasure's Surf & Turf, June 2000 (Lost Treasure magazine's online newsletter) Ken Weinman: "Treasure Galleons of the Mojave desert" | |
2000 | Strange Sea Tales Along the California Coast (book) by Claudine Burnett, 2000 * Published for Historical Society of Long Beach; has a story on Viking ships in the desert. | |
2001 | Desert USA Online, April 2001 (online magazine, Borrego Springs, California) Tim McCrerey: "The Last Voyage of the Content" | |
2002 | Lost Treasure magazine, Nov. 2002, p. 18 (Grove, Oklahoma magazine) Ettore & Diana Nannetti: "Pearls in the Desert: A Galleon Hidden in Sand" | |
2002 | "La Contessa" Art Car, Aug. 2002 – Dec. 2006 built by Simon Cheffins, Maduro and the Extra Action Marching Band * This desert ship was a half sized 16th century Spanish galleon replica. It was built around a school bus and cruised the Burning Man festival in Nevada's Black rock desert. It was destroyed by an arsonist in Dec. 6 2006 | |
2003 | Desert USA Online, May 2003 (online magazine, Borrego Springs, California) Bob Difley: "The Lost Ship of the Mojave" | |
2003 | Los Angeles Times, June 8, 2003, p. B4 (Los Angeles, California newspaper) Cecilia Rasmussen: "Were there Spanish Pearls Before Brine in Salton Sea?" * Has a list of airplanes lost in the Salton Sea. | |
2004 | "Ben Jordan: Paranormal Investigator" 2004 (animated computer game adventure) Francisco Gonzalez: "Case 2 – The Lost Galleon of the Salton Sea" | |
2005 | The Lost Ship in the Desert: The True Story (booklet) by William Pfost, 2005, 2007 * Was updated and rewritten with several changes and corrections in 2007. After the 2005 publication, Bill Pfost met a former (never to be named) rancher from Indio who claims to have gone to the lost ship in Imperial Valley with other Imperial and Coachella Valley residents about 40 years before. | |
2005 | Desert Magazine , June 2005 (Palm Desert Sun newspaper publication, California) Ann Japenga: "The Glamorous Galleon" | |
2005 | Sacramento Valley Detecting Buffs, Aug. 5, 2005 (online newsletter – pdf. format) "The Legend of the Mojave Desert's Lost Ship" | |
2006 | Weird California (book, p.. 61) by Joe Osterle, 2006 | |
2006 | From the Desert to the Sea ... , Jan. 21, 2006 (online Blog / syndicated newsletter) John Stoddard: "Story for a Desert Campfire" | |
2006 | Exploritoria, Sept. 2, 2006, (online Blog) "Exploritoria of a Viking Ship in the Desert" | |
2007 | Prime View, June 6, 2007 (online edition of View Neighborhood Newspapers a Las Vegas, Nevada regional newspaper) "Ships in the desert? Mirage or unsolved mystery?" By Florine Lawlor * tells of 1867 sighting by Dusty Millor & Duke Chellow | |
2009 | Stay Away From Pinto Canyon Published June 3, 2009 by the San Diego Reader. Written by Robert Marcos The article is about a hiking trip to view petroglyphs which are located in Pinto Canyon, west of the Yuma Desert. One petroglyph clearly shows a large two-masted sailing vessel, with oars on each side. [3] | |
2014 | Pearls, Petroglyphs, and Desert Shipwrecks Published April 16, 2014 by the San Diego Reader. Written by Robert Marcos Writer Robert Marcos identifies the Spanish ship depicted in the petroglyph he found in Pinto Canyon. He follows the journey of Captain Juan Iturbe as he and his men sail up the Sea of Cortez in search of pearls, and the eventual abandonment of their ship south of the present-day Salton Sea. [4] |
The Baja California peninsula is a peninsula in northwestern Mexico. It separates the Gulf of California from the Pacific Ocean. The peninsula extends from Mexicali, Baja California, in the north to Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur, in the south.
Imperial County is a county located on the southeast border of the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 179,702, making it the least populous county in Southern California. The county seat and largest city is El Centro. Imperial is the most recent California county to be established, as it was created in 1907 out of portions of San Diego County.
The Salton Sea is a shallow, landlocked, highly saline endorheic lake in Riverside and Imperial counties at the southern end of the U.S. state of California. It lies on the San Andreas Fault within the Salton Trough, which stretches to the Gulf of California in Mexico.
The Imperial Valley of Southern California lies in Imperial and Riverside counties, with an urban area centered on the city of El Centro. The Valley is bordered by the Colorado River to the east and, in part, the Salton Sea to the west. Farther west lies the San Diego and Imperial County border. To the north is the Coachella Valley region of Riverside County, which together with Imperial Valley form the Salton Trough, or the Cahuilla Basin, also the county line of Imperial and Riverside counties, and to the south the international boundary with Mexico.
The Low Desert is a common name for any desert in California that is under 2,000 feet in altitude. These areas include, but are not exclusive to, the Colorado Desert and Yuha Desert branches of the Sonoran Desert, in the far southeasternmost portion of Southern California. The Low Desert is distinguished in biogeography from the adjacent northern High Desert or Mojave Desert by latitude, elevation, animal life, climate, and native plant communities.
Colorado Desert is a part of the larger Sonoran Desert located in California, United States and Baja California, Mexico. It encompasses approximately 7 million acres, including the heavily irrigated Coachella, Imperial and Mexicali valleys. It is home to many unique flora and fauna.
The Colorado River Delta is the region where the Colorado River once flowed into the Gulf of California in eastern Mexicali Municipality in the north of the state of Baja California, in northwestern Mexico. The delta is part of a larger geologic region called the Salton Trough. Historically, the interaction of the river's flow and the ocean's tide created a dynamic environment, supporting freshwater, brackish, and saltwater species. Within the delta region, the river split into multiple braided channels and formed a complex estuary and terrestrial ecosystems. The use of water upstream and the accompanying reduction of freshwater flow has resulted in the loss of most of the wetlands of the area, as well as drastic changes to the aquatic ecosystems - an ecosystem collapse.
The California Development Company was formed in 1896 as a replacement for the defunct Colorado River Irrigation Company, which had been started a few years earlier for the purpose of planning an irrigation system for the lower Colorado Desert in California. The rich, silty soil of the area was found to be suitable for agriculture, but wells tapping groundwater brought up an inadequate supply of water for such a hot, arid region. The California Development Company took over the project of diverting Colorado River water into the Coachella and Imperial Valleys in the Salton Sink, a dry lake bed which today contains the Salton Sea, hoping to turn the desert green with agricultural fields. The first canals were being constructed by 1900 under the guidance of chief engineer George Chaffey.
The Gran Desierto de Altar is one of the major sub-ecoregions of the Sonoran Desert, located in the State of Sonora, in northwest Mexico. It includes the only active erg dune region in North America. The desert extends across much of the northern border of the Gulf of California, spanning more than 100 kilometres (62 mi) east to west and over 50 kilometres (31 mi) north to south. It constitutes the largest continuous wilderness area within the Sonoran Desert.
The Desert Rat Scrap Book was a (roughly) quarterly, southwestern humor publication based in Thousand Palms, California. DRSB was published in editions of 10,000 to 20,000 copies, whenever its creator, Harry Oliver had sufficient material, and money enough to pay the printer. Forty-six issues were printed and distributed via Southern California bookstores and newsstands, and by mail worldwide. DRSB was devoted to lore, legends, lies and laughs of the American Southwest region, especially featuring prospectors and other desert rats. The publication was launched in late 1945 and ran through early 1967.
The Coyote Mountains are a small mountain range in San Diego and Imperial Counties in southern California. The Coyotes form a narrow ESE trending 2 mi (3.2 km) wide range with a length of about 12 mi (19 km). The southeast end turns and forms a 2 mi (3.2 km) north trending "hook". The highest point is Carrizo Mountain on the northeast end with an elevation of 2,408 feet (734 m). Mine Peak at the northwest end of the range has an elevation of 1,850 ft (560 m). Coyote Wash along I-8 along the southeast margin of the range is 100 to 300 feet in elevation. Plaster City lies in the Yuha Desert about 5.5 mi (8.9 km) east of the east end of the range.
Laguna Salada is a vast dry lake some 10 meters below sea level in the Sonoran Desert of Baja California, 30 km (19 mi) southwest of Mexicali. This lake was called "Ha wi mək" in Cocopah language and "Ha-sa-ai" in Kumeyaay language. When dry, the flatness of the exposed lake bed sediments makes it a favoured location for recreational driving. It is also notorious for its dust storms when dry, usually the result of monsoonal thunderstorms during the summer. During times of significant rain the lagoon can fill completely with water, leaving the unpaved road along its west bank as the only means of traversing the area. Flanked by the Sierra de Los Cucapah and the Sierra de Juárez mountain ranges, the lake is approximately 60 km (37 mi) long and 17 km (11 mi) at its widest point.
The Imperial Fault Zone is a system of geological faults located in Imperial County in the Southern California region, and adjacent Baja California state in Mexico. It cuts across the border between the United States and Mexico.
The Brawley Seismic Zone (BSZ), also known as the Brawley fault zone, is a predominantly extensional tectonic zone that connects the southern terminus of the San Andreas Fault with the Imperial Fault in Southern California. The BSZ is named for the nearby town of Brawley in Imperial County, California, and the seismicity there is characterized by earthquake swarms.
Cerro Prieto is a volcano located approximately 29 km (18 mi) SSE of Mexicali in the Mexican state of Baja California. The volcano lies astride a spreading center associated with the East Pacific Rise. This spreading center is also responsible for a large geothermal field, which has been harnessed to generate electric power by the Cerro Prieto Geothermal Power Station.
The Cerro Prieto Fault is a transform fault located in far northern Baja California. It runs between the Cerro Prieto spreading center located southwest of Mexicali, and the Wagner Basin, another spreading center which lies under the Gulf of California. These spreading centers are part of the East Pacific Rise, the northern leg of which has formed the Gulf of California by steadily rifting the Baja California Peninsula away from the mainland of Mexico.
Imperial Valley Geothermal Project is a complex of eleven geothermal power stations located in the Salton Sea Geothermal Field, along the southeastern shore of the Salton Sea in the Imperial Valley of California. It is the second largest geothermal field in the United States after The Geysers in Northern California.
The Colorado River is a major river of the western United States and northwest Mexico in North America. Its headwaters are in the Rocky Mountains where La Poudre Pass Lake is its source. Located in north central Colorado it flows southwest through the Colorado Plateau country of western Colorado, southeastern Utah and northwestern Arizona where it flows through the Grand Canyon. It turns south near Las Vegas, Nevada, forming the Arizona–Nevada border in Lake Mead and the Arizona–California border a few miles below Davis Dam between Laughlin, Nevada and Needles, California before entering Mexico in the Colorado Desert. Most of its waters are diverted into the Imperial Valley of Southern California. In Mexico its course forms the boundary between Sonora and Baja California before entering the Gulf of California. This article describes most of the major features along the river.
Tomás de Cardona, a native of Venice who lived in Seville during the 17th century, was a business entrepreneur and a favorite at the Spanish royal court. With his partners Sancho de Meras and Francisco de la Paraya, he invested in a company formed to exploit the pearl fisheries in California.
Lake Cahuilla was a prehistoric lake in California and northern Mexico. Located in the Coachella and Imperial valleys, it covered surface areas of 5,700 km2 (2,200 sq mi) to a height of 12 m (39 ft) above sea level during the Holocene. During earlier stages of the Pleistocene, the lake reached even higher elevations, up to 31–52 m (102–171 ft) above sea level. During the Holocene most of the water came from the Colorado River with little contribution from local runoff; in the Pleistocene local runoff was higher and it is possible that Lake Cahuilla was supported solely from local water sources during the Wisconsin glaciation. The lake overflowed close to Cerro Prieto into the Rio Hardy, eventually draining into the Gulf of California.