Buena Vista Valley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Buena Vista Valley | |
|---|---|
Aerial view of the northern part of Buena Vista Valley | |
| Length | 40 mi (64 km) N-S |
| Geography | |
| Country | United States |
| State | Nevada |
| Region | Great Basin |
| County | Pershing |
| Communities | |
| Borders on | |
| Coordinates | 40°21′23″N 117°59′00″W / 40.35639°N 117.98333°W |
The Buena Vista Valley is an approximately 40-mile (64 km) long[1] valley located in central-east Pershing County, Nevada. Unionville, Nevada lies at its northwest, at the foothills of the Humboldt Range.
The valley contains the approximately 18-mile (29 km) long Buena Vista Lake Bed, a crescent shaped lakebed adjacent the southeast perimeter of the Humboldt Range.[2]
The Buena Vista Valley is an approximately north–south trending valley, and crescent shaped narrowing both due-north in its north end, and due-southwest in the south. The narrowing in the north is from the perimeter ranges of the Humboldt Range, west and the East Range, east. The valley is at its widest at the north end of the Buena Vista Lake Bed, about 13-mi.[3]
The southwest is a region connected to the northwest of the Carson Sink. The narrowing of the valley southwestwards is caused by the Stillwater Range, its north section which turns to trend due-northeast. The low elevation Buena Vista Hills, 5,220 feet (1,591 m), and Chocolate Butte, 4,778 feet (1,456 m),[4] lie between the Carson Sink and the southwest Buena Vista Valley. This hilly region is located in a sub-valley region, named "Antelope Valley".
