Most lakes in the Mammoth
Lakes Basin and many of the other 100+ nearby lakes were scooped out by
glaciers. The Basin is a large glacial cirque basin that was carved by the
grinding movement of glacial ice and rocks entrained within the ice. The lakes
in the lower basin, including Lake Mary, Lake George and Horseshoe Lake, fill
depressions in glacial moraine deposits. The lakes in the upper basin,
including Duck Lake, Shelton Lakes and Deer Lakes, fill depressions in the
underlying bedrock from metamorphosed sedimentary rocks that were scooped out
by glaciers. The lakes are only accessible during the summer months.
The lowest in the chain of
lakes are Twin Lakes (Elevation 8,540 ft. / 2,602 m). They are located three miles (4.8 km) from
the town of Mammoth Lakes. This postcard
shows the view from Lake Mary Road at the top of Twin Falls. Twin Falls tumbles 300 feet (91 metres) into
Upper Twin Lake.
There are camping sites at
five lakes of the Mammoth Lakes Basin and many visitors come to this area for
outdoor recreation as well as sight-seeing.
There seems to be general agreement among visitors that Twin Lakes offer
the most scenic view.
I received this postcard
(24 April 2014) from Maria Garcia (Swap-bot).
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