Big Smoky Valley

The Big Smoky Valley is a landform of the Tonopah Basin between the Toiyabe and Toquima mountain ranges. It is about 100 miles (160 km) in length.

Big Smoky Valley
Big Smoky Valley
Location of Big Smoky Valley in Nevada
Area4,960 sq mi (12,800 km2)[1]
(watersheds' area)
Geography
Locationsaddle of drainage divide
(south of the Hadley Airport)
CountryUnited States
StateNevada
RegionNorthern and Southern
Big Smoky Valley watersheds
Coordinates38.664436°N 117.171078°W / 38.664436; -117.171078
Nevada Historical Marker
Reference no.42[2]

Big Smoky Valley was so named on account of haze which frequently settles there.[3] It is known by other names (some with different spellings): including Great Smoky Valley, Smokey Valley, Smoky Valley, Wen-A-No-Nu-Fee Valley, and Won-A-No-Nu-Fee Valley.[4] The U.S. Geological Survey usually refers to it as "Big Smoky Valley," but the chamber of commerce in the valley calls itself the Greater Smoky Valley Chamber of Commerce.

Approximately 2,500 people live in the valley, which has seven small communities. There is an open-pit gold mine at the southern end of the valley, and local industry includes mining, agriculture, and ranching. The valley traverses three counties: Esmeralda, Nye, and Lander. Average yearly precipitation in most of the valley is less than 10 inches (25 cm). The North and South Twin Rivers flow into the Big Smoky Valleythe latter at an elevation of 6,401 feet (1,951 m)and the water is completely diverted except during periods of high flow.[5]

References


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