Death Valley is an extreme desert land area located in Eastern California. The specifics of the area are that it is located within the Mojave Desert, and is physically the lowest area (282 feet below sea level at the Badwater Basin) on the North American continent. Oddly enough, this point is only 84.6 miles from Mount Whitney, which is the highest point in the United States at 14,505 feet. It is also is the driest area in the United States, measured through rainfall amounts on average of 1.5 inches. The heat in Death Valley is extreme, and the area holds the world record for the highest reported temperature on earth, which happened at Furnace Creek on July 10, 1913 when the temperature went to 134 degrees Fahrenheit. Although there was a similar temperature measured in Libya in 1922, the World Meteorological Organization could not verify it, and thus called it invalid. Death Valley is officially the hottest place on the face of the earth, but Death Valley tours are comfortable and beautiful. Death Valley is located on the border of California and Nevada, within the Great Basin area of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The majority of Death Valley National Park is made up of Death Valley, and it is the highlight and main feature of the Mojave and Colorado Deserts Biosphere Reserve. Death Valley itself is an area of about 3,000 square miles. Tours of Death Valley will concentrate mainly on the beauty of the extreme geology and landscape, and educate visitors about this unique area in the world, as well as what produces the attributes of the area. For example, one of the very unique features of Death Valley is that it contains “salt pans,” which was left behind when inland seas (once called Lake Manly) evaporated, leaving behind
Death Valley is an extreme desert land area located in Eastern California. The specifics of the area are that it is located within the Mojave