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Rose Out Of Pacific

Rose Out Of Pacific image
Parent Issue
Day
23
Month
May
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

p NCI.E SAM AC quired some new territory in the Pacific a few week? ago in a novel manner. It was not ac quired by conquest' annexatioD or parchase, but was a gift from nature herself, whc pvshed it up from the depths of the i%cific ocean and gave it unasked. Geologists say that nature is constantly giving and taking land affer this fashioa; t;;it some portions of the earlh are stoadily subsiding and others rising; some coast lines are advancing and others receding New Jersey is gradually losing territory along the coast, while in other regions new land is bcing added to the area of the UniteS States. But the usual progress is slow. Once in a while a new island is lifted suddenly out of the sea by volcanic action, aud this practically, is what occurred off the coast of California severnl weeks ago when about 35,000 square yards of rock was added to one of the Santa Barbara islands with a suddennnss that surprised the people lívlug tfce ïa'.and Not only was new land added to the island, but that already existing was moved around in an embarrassing rnanner. Buildings erected in the shelter of the cliffs, with a seaward exposure, were lifted up forty or flfty feet to the level of the plateau and twisted around so as to face directly inland. The Santa Barbara group of islands lies about sixty miles off the coast of California, in about the latitude of Los Angeles. The island of San Jiiguel, to which the new land has been added, is one of the smaller islanaa, and is owned by Capt. W. G. Waters, who has a big sheep ranch on it. na only living people on the island are Capt. Waters and his sheep herders and laborers. Some of the islanrla of the groups ,are noted for theii' sconic beauties, but San Miguel is bleak and comparatively uninteresting. It is plainly of volcanic origin, and it is said that at various times within the last half century stretches of the cliffs along the southern shore of the island have fallen away and been swallowed up in the sea. But no one knows of aay land having been given back by the ocean before the event of the second week in March. Capt. Watirs v ■' ■■" í - the island when the earthquake eroption, or whatever it was, occurred. Ho took the information to the mainland, and ths San Francisco E:-:aminer sent a correspondent to San Miguel to get all the facts and some pictures of the new territory of the United States. The picture and information here given are from the Examiner articles. Capt. Waters lives in his ranch house on the Southwest side of the island, a considerable distance fro;a the point where the new land was added. On the night when the disturbance occurred he was sitting in his house rcadnr. He feit the earth shiver, bnt ? e;rthquakes are not uncommon thereabout he took little notice of the ccurrence. The next morning he starled out around the beach toward his boathouse to look for h'is sloop, which Was due from the mainland. When he neared the harbor and fhe place where his boathouse had been he had to rub his eyes because of the reinarkable appearance of the surroundings. The beach had disappeared, and where a bay of placid water had been rose a auge mass of broken cliffs. He ciimbed up on the high ground overlooking the bay, and there on the plateau, forty feet or more above the water line and three hundred feet inland, were the boathouse and sheep corral which the previous evening had been right on the water's edge. On reaching the boathouse he found another surprise. The building stood as flrm as ever, but whereas it had recently faced seaward It was now turned almost completely around and faced almost directly away from the bay. The tracks of the sheep were still plainly visible on the ground, but instead of being on the left side of the boathouse, where the path had always been, they were now on tüe right. He walked out on the top of the newly formed cliffs toward the water, and found the great mass of rock still trembling and swaying. There was a sound of grinding and churning, and every now and then a chunk of rock would settle a little. The mass was evidently still adjusting itself in lts new position. The bioy to which his Bloop was moored when in harbor was formerly 400 feet from the sandy beach. Now it was about 100 feet from the abrupt face of the new cliffs. He set up some posts to serve as marks by which to observe any further changes and ■withdrew to more solid ground. The next morning he found that in its readjustment the land had moved seaward twelve or fifteen feet, and the mass of new land seemed quiet and Permanently settled. Then Capt. Waters went to the mainland and told f the happenings on San Miguel, and day or two later some scientific men ■vrlth surveyors' instruments and camera, went over and verified his story.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register