Mojave's Preserved Mysteries
The Mojave National Reserve in California is the driest desert in the United States that occupies nearly 50,000 square miles. See the mysteries that this desert has in store through the lens of conservationist and nature photographer Ian Shive.
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Photo By: Ian Shive
Kelso Dunes
Kelso Dunes
Kelso Dunes.
Kelso Dunes
Light rays pass from the surface into the subterannean Cima lava tube.
Landscapes along the Teutonia Peak trail.
Landscapes along the Teutonia Peak trail.
Pictographs painted by the first people to inhabit these lands.
Petroglyphs carved by the first people to inhabit these lands.
Petroglyphs carved by the first people to inhabit these lands.
Miner's cabin.
Clothes weathered by time, hanging inside a miner's cabin.
Abandoned mining equipment and buildings at the Aiken Mine.
Playa and formations along Zzyzx Road entrance.
Giant cactus and geologic formations.
Sage brush near Aiken mine.
The Ring Loop Trail.
The Ring Loop Trail.
Light rays pass from the surface into the subterannean Cima lava tube.