California Central Valley
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Image:Wpdms shdrlfi020l california central valley.jpg Image:Californiacentralvalley.jpg Image:Centralvalleyroad.jpg The California Central Valley is a large, flat valley that dominates the central portion of the state of California. It is home to the state's giant agriculture industry.
It stretches for nearly 400 miles north to south, its northern half referred to as the Sacramento Valley and its southern half as the San Joaquin Valley. The two halves are joined by the shared delta of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, a large expanse of interconnected canals, streambeds, sloughs, marshes and peat islands.
Bounded by the Cascade Range to the north, the Sierra Nevada to the east, the Tehachapi Mountains to the south, and the Coast Range and San Francisco Bay to the west, the valley is a vast agricultural region drained by the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers.
These counties are commonly associated with the Central Valley:
North Sacramento Valley (Shasta, Tehama, Glenn, Butte, Colusa).
Sacramento Metro (Sacramento, El Dorado, Sutter, Yuba, Yolo, Placer).
North San Joaquin (San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced).
South San Joaquin (Madera, Fresno, Kings, Tulare).
About 5.7 million people live in the Central Valley today.
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Geology
The flatness of the valley floor contrasts with the rugged hills or gentle mountains that are typical of most of California's terrain. The valley is thought to have originated below sea level as an offshore area depressed by subduction of the Farallon Plate into a trench further offshore.
It was later enclosed by the uplift of the Coast Ranges, with its original outlet into Monterey Bay. Faulting moved the Coast Ranges, and a new outlet developed near what is now San Francisco Bay. Over the millennia, the valley was filled by the sediments of these same ranges, as well as the rising Sierra Nevada to the east; that filling eventually created an extraordinary flatness just barely above sea level; at one time the annual snow melt turned the entire valley into an inland lake.
The one notable exception to the flat valley floor is Sutter Buttes, the remnants of an extinct volcano just north of Sacramento.
Climate
The Central Valley is hot and dry during the summer and cool and damp in winter. with frequent ground fog known regionally as "tule fog". Winter and spring comprise the rainy season — although during the late summer, southeasterly winds aloft can bring thunderstorms of tropical origin, mainly in the southern half of the San Joaquin Valley.
Rivers
The Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers flow through the northern and southern halves of the valley, respectively. Major tributaries of these two rivers include:
Sacramento Valley
San Joaquin Valley
- Cosumnes River
- Mokelumne River
- Stanislaus River
- Tuolumne River
- Merced River
- Chowchilla River
- San Joaquin River
- Kings River
- Kern River
Major cities
Major cities in the Central Valley include Redding, Chico, Sacramento (California state capital and the Valley's largest metropolitan area), Stockton, Fresno (largest city proper in the Valley), Modesto, Visalia and Bakersfield.
Culture and politics
Culturally and politically, the Central Valley is more conservative in culture and politics than the huge urban regions of California such as the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles. Some enclaves, such as Chico and Davis (home to the University of California, Davis), are more generally liberal than the rest of the Valley, but their surrounding counties are typically conservative. The city of Sacramento is also more liberal than the Valley norm, but its surrounding suburbs, particularly in Placer and El Dorado Counties, are conservative.
The Central Valley should not be confused with "the Valley" that is home to Valley Girls, the San Fernando Valley in the Los Angeles region.
Agriculture
The Central Valley is one of the most productive agricultural regions in the world. Virtually all non-tropical crops are grown here. Early farming was concentrated close to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, where the water table was high year round and cheap water transport available, but subsequent irrigation projects have brought many more parts of the valley into productive use. For example, the Central Valley Project was formed in 1935 to redistribute and store water for agricultural and municipal purposes with dams and canals.
It was in the Central Valley, especially in and around Delano, that farm labor leader Cesar Chavez organized Mexican American grape pickers into a union in the 1960's, the United Farmworkers Association (UFWA), in order to improve their working conditions.
Social issues
Since the 1980s, Bakersfield, Fresno, Visalia, Tracy and Modesto have exploded in both size and population, as housing values along the coast increased. Many people from the San Francisco Bay Area have moved out to more rural areas in search of affordable housing, clogging the roads between their Valley homes and their Bay Area jobs.
These cities (along with Sacramento) have been confronted by big-city problems, including violent crime, drug trafficking, organized crime, traffic congestion, and air pollution. The San Joaquin Valley now has the worst air quality in California (and the highest asthma rates), and; — like the more populous areas — its cities are subject to stringent anti-pollution laws.