|
A new and different experience awaits ACS
convention goers attending the Fall 1997 meeting in Las Vegas.
The glitz and excitement of this playground city are in
strong contrast to the stark, quiet beauty of the great
southwestern Mojave Desert in which it resides.
Many historians believe that Francisco Garces
explored parts of Nevada in 1775-1776; others think the
first exploration was not until the early 1800s. In any case,
Spanish explorers gave the land the Spanish name
Nevada or "snow capped" in honor of its beautiful mountains.
Three Native American tribes lived on the land before the
arrival of the Europeans: the Shoshone, the Washoe, and the
Southern and Northern Pauites. Today there are 25
reservations in Nevada, a state that joined the Union in 1864.
Las Vegas, or "the meadow" in Spanish, began as
a whistle stop on the Union Pacific railway line between
Los Angeles and Salt Lake City. A land auction in 1905
established the community as a town, incorporated in 1911.
Two events caused dramatic grow in the 1930s. In 1931
Nevada legalized gambling in an effort to finance public
education during the Great Depression. The second event was the
construction of nearby Hoover dam, which created over
5,000 jobs and a surge in the city's economy while other parts
of the nation faced economic hard times.
To accommodate the growing interest in the Las
Vegas and its gambling facilities, hotels were built in the 1940s. Development continued after World War II.
Manufacturing, Nells Air Force Base and other government agencies,
warehousing, and trucking are industries of this city's
current economy, but tourism and gaming are the major employers.
In downtown Las Vegas, along Fremont Street
between Las Vegas Boulevard and Main Street, where many
casinos stand, is the Fremont Street
Experience. Here, once an hour after dark, a 90-foot high canopy that covers 4
acres, lights up in a 6-minute computer-driven show with
wraparound sound and music. This area provides a place for
outdoor festivals, street performances, and holiday celebrations.
In addition to gambling, a new type of recreation
has emerged in recent years: the theme mega-resort. A
sampling of these recreational centers reveals that each one creates
a different fantasy. The Grand Slam Canyon is
a nongambling, 5-acre, climate-controlled indoor
amusement park with roller coasters, dinosaurs, and replicas of
waterfalls, which reflects the evolution of the Southwest's
Canyon Country. The main feature of the pyramid-shaped
Luxor Hotel-Casino is a full-scale reproduction of King
Tutankhamen's Tomb. Treasure Island is a
representation of the world of Robert Louis Stevenson's novel: a pirate
village on the shores of the Caribbean Sea where there are
periodic battles between the pirate ship Hispaniola and
the British frigate Britannia. A 33-acre nongaming theme
park, much like a Hollywood movie lot, makes up the
MGM Grand Hotel/Casino. Visit lush gardens under a
90-foot-high glass-enclosed atrium filled with royal palms and
tropical foliage of Polynesia at the Mirage. A giant volcano
erupts each 15 minutes and a 20,000-gallon aquarium, filled
with exotic sea life, covers a wall near the registration desk. A
pool for dolphins and an enclosure for the rare white tigers
used in the Siegfried and Roy show are also on
display.
For those inclined to venture beyond
The Strip there are museums, industrial tours, and beautiful parks to
visit. A trip to the Las Vegas Natural History
Museum provides an intimate view of the plant and animal life of
the Mojave Desert. There is an international wildlife room,
a shark exhibit with a 300-gallon tank complete with
live sharks, exhibits on modern birds and animals, and
animated dinosaurs. The Nevada State Museum and
Historical Society has galleries with dioramas devoted to
biology, earth science, and anthropology. The museum
specializes in prehistoric animal life and has a display of
Nevada mammoths. Of interest to chemists is the exhibit on the
role of neon in Nevada history. The Marjorie Barrick
Museum of Natural History at the University of Las Vegas
exhibits such topics as the development of mining and
minerals in the state and early human life.
The Desert Demonstration
Gardens explore xeroscape horticulturelow-use water gardening,
extremely important in the desert areas of southern
Nevada. Las Vegas also has two small specialty zoos. The
Southern Nevada Zoological Park features over 50 species of
reptiles and small animals indigenous to the area as well as
a few universal favoritesa tiger, a lion, and some
monkeys. In addition to the white tiger habitat at the Mirage, the
two performers have opened a 2.5-acre zoo call The Secret Garden of Sigfried and Roy, where rare Royal white
tigers, Bengal tigers, snow leopards, and Asian elephants
are bred and are available for the public to see.
Sites within 50 Miles of Las Vegas
Just 30 miles outside Las Vegas is one of the
greatest architectural feats of this century, Hoover
Dam. This 726-foot high structure spans the Black Canyon. The
visitors' center provides a multimedia program with background
on why the dam was constructed and how it functions.
Tickets for tours of the interior and exterior of the dam can be
obtained at the center. Get to the dam early in the day, as
the valley can get quite hot and uncomfortable in the afternoon.
Hoover Dam creates the 110-mile long
Lake Mead. The lake is a fine recreational facility for fishing and
boating. There is a Hoover Dam Museum in Boulder City, the
Nevada town adjacent to the dam. About a mile from the dam, in
Nevada, is the Alan Bible Visitor Center, which has a
small natural history museum with displays and dioramas of
local plants and animal life and a lovely botanical garden.
The town of Henderson, a few miles from Las
Vegas, on the road to Boulder City, has several interesting
places at which to stop. The Ethel Mars Chocolate Factory
and Cactus Garden has a self-guided tour where you
can watch candy production and enjoy Mrs. Mars's cactus garden. Ethel Mars is the mother of the inventor of the
Mars Bar. Cranberry World West has a self-guided tour of
the Ocean Spray bottling plant. There are displays about
the cranberry, which is not a local crop, and the variety of
products the company produces. A visit to the Kidd
Marshmallow Factory includes a tour. Not only do you learn
how the product is made but you can sample it as well.
The Community College of Southern Nevada in
North Las Vegas has a Planetarium with a regularly
scheduled show and multimedia program about astronomy. The
observatory is open after the evening show, weather permitting.
Sites 50-100 Miles from Las Vegas
Just 52 miles northeast of Las Vegas is the beautiful
Valley of Fire State Park, featuring wind-carved red
sandstone and native American petroglyphs. There are many parks
50 miles to the west. Red Rock Canyon, formed by a
thrust fault, features dramatic red sandstone formations. Feral
horses and burros, desert bighorn sheep, and antelope roam the
canyon. The visitor center provides details on touring the
park and region. Mount Charleston Peak of the Spring
Mountain range, rising almost 12,000 feet, has fine hiking trails.
|
Las Vegas Natural History
Museum, 900 Las Vegas Blvd.; phone 384-3466.
Nevada State Museum and Historical
Society, 700 Twin Lakes Dr.; phone 486-5205.
Marjorie Barrick Museum of Natural History,
4505 S. Maryland Parkway; phone 895-3381.
Desert Demonstration
Gardens, 3701 W. Alta Dr.; phone 285-3205.
Southern Nevada Zoological
Park, 1775 N. Rancho Dr.; phone 648-5955.
Hoover Dam, Bureau of Reclamation, P.O. Box
60400, Boulder City NV 89005-0400; phone 702/293-8367.
Alan Bible Visitor
Center, 601 Nevada Highway, Boulder City NV 89005; phone 702/293-8906.
Ethel Mars Chocolate Factory and Cactus
Garden, 2 Cactus garden Dr., Henderson NV 89109; phone
702/458-8864.
Cranberry World West, 1301 American Pacific
Dr., Henderson NV 89014; phone 702/566-7160.
Kidd Marshmallow
Factory, 1180 Marshmallow Lane, Henderson NV 89104; phone 702/564-3878.
Planetarium, 3300 E. Cheyenne Ave, North Las
Vegas NV; phone 651-5059.
Valley of Fire State
Park, Route 15 north and then 169 west; phone 702/397-2088.
Red Rock Canyon, Charleston Blvd. west bound for
15 miles; phone 702/363-1921.
Mount Charleston Peak, phone 702/873-8800.
|
|