Great Basin is probably the least known national park in the southwest, partly as it was created quite recently, in 1986, prior to which only the caverns were officially recognised, as the Lehman Caves National Monument, and partly as the area is far from any other famous landmark, and not reached by any major cross-country road. As with some other mountains, such as the San Jacinto range near Palm Springs and the Guadalupe Mountains of Texas, as well as other hills in the Basin and Range landscape of Nevada, Wheeler Peak rises like an great island from the surrounding desert; at higher elevations, moisture increases and the temperature falls, resulting in different plant and wildlife zones over a vertical distance of 7,000 feet. The foothills of the park lie at an elevation of 6,000 feet and are part of the Great Basin Desert of Nevada, an area dry for most of the year and characterised by long wide valleys interspersed by narrow mountain ridges running generally north-south.
From the park entrance to the snow-capped summits there is an elevation difference of over 6,000 feet, and the steady changes in temperature and moisture result in a transition through several distinct vegetation zones from ponderosa pine and oak woodlands, through thick forests of Douglas fir and aspen, which become interspersed with grassy meadows, rocky outcrops and occasional lakes, and finally above the treeline, where only mosses and lichen survive. Scattered groves of bristlecone pines occur at elevations around 10,000 feet, and one specimen has been dated to be 4,950 years old, competing with similar trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California to be the oldest known living object on Earth. The varied zones give support to a wide range of wildlife, much of which could not survive in the desert basins.
There are three official campsites within Great Basin National Park; the highest is at an elevation of 9,886 feet, and so experiences chilly nights most of the year. A good (free) alternative is close to a gravel pit, 2 miles north of Baker and a short distance east of the main road NV 487, but out-of-sight of passing traffic. This is quite a memorable location, with uninterrupted views over many miles of flat desert in the Snake Valley to the east, and a palpable sense of peace and isolation at night.
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