Inscription
Sand Mountain. Sand Mountain dominates the Salt Wells Basin and is visible from Mt. Rose peak in the Carson Range 82 miles to the west. The dune is important to off highway vehicle enthusiasts, biologists, Native Americans, and geologists. Sand Mountain is a sinuous transverse dune derived from Ice Age Lake Lahontan beach sands piled here by southwesterly-trending winds.
The dune is the Stillwater Northern Paiutes’ Panitogogwa, a giant rattlesnake traveling to the northeast with the wind to its back. The snake can be heard as it moves toward its hole, a phenomenon geologists associate with “singing” sand dunes. The Sand Mountain blue butterfly is only found here where it is depends on the Kearney buckwheat plant.
The dunes clearly marked the location of nearby Sand Springs, improved and mapped in 1859 as a potential emigrant stop by Army Lieutenant James H. Simpson. Sand Springs later served as the location of the Sand Springs Pony Express Station in 1860 and the terminus of the 1866 Fort Churchill and Sand Springs Toll Road.
Location
Sources
More markers in Churchill
Pony Express Route 1860 Sesquicentennial 2010.
Fallon, NV
Pony Express Route 1860 Sesquicentennial 2010.
Oats Park School.
Fallon, NV
Oats Park School. The Oats Park School was designed in 1914 by Frederick J. DeLongchamps, Nevada’s pre-eminent architect of the period.
Lahontan Dam.
Fallon, NV
Lahontan Dam. Lahontan Dam, completed in 1915, is the key feature of the Newlands irrigation project that turned Lahontan Valley into one...
Brushed metal plaque № 48985
Fairview, NV
Fairview 1905 – 1917.
Wonder.
Fairview, NV
Wonder. Located 13 miles to the north is the camp of Wonder, a major mining center in the early years of the 20th Century.
