Tufa towers and cobalt waters

Mono Lake seen from the mountains of the Sierra (California) - Photo: Still Gravity.
Mono Lake in the eastern Sierra of California - License our images here.

This is a strange and beautiful lake. The intense blue of its waters, the white of the rocks that from a distance look like floating ice, the background of the High Sierra. Amazing place for campers and hikers - our pictures are from 2010.

These white rocks are called "tufa". They are born underwater thanks to this calcium rich lake. The formations are fragile, so it's forbidden to climb them. Read the signs.  

Tufa formations in Mono Lake, California - Photo: Still Gravity.
The tufa towers of Mono Lake. 

The lake was named in 1852 after the Mono Pueblo of the Paiute Indians. Try these cobalt waters and you will discover that they are pretty salty. We found many birds on the shores, so looks like there is something good for them around here.  

There are old volcanoes on the southern shores of Mono Lake. The younger one is less than 700 years old. Panum crater is close to South Tufa and Navy Beach. 

Mono Lake seen from the mountains - Photo: Still Gravity.
Mono Lake seen from the mountains. 

John Muir walked around here in 1869. He made drawings of the Mono craters - check one here.

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