A Telephoto Shot Of A Death Valley Salt Pan In The Badwater Basin Area, Death Valley National Park
![A telephoto image of an almost perfectly-round salt pan on the floor of Death Valley with a long, squiggly white line of salt connecting to the salt pan, Death Valley National Park](https://www.nationalparkstraveler.org/sites/default/files/styles/npt_square2/public/photos/potw/deva_rebeccalatson-0538_death_valley_salt_pan.jpg?itok=wiFnRq5r)
“The source of Badwater’s salts is Death Valley’s drainage system of 9,000 square miles—an area larger than New Hampshire. Rain falling on distant peaks creates floods that rush ever lower. Along the way, minerals dissolve from rocks and join the flood. Here, at the lowest elevation, floods come to rest, forming temporary lakes. As the water evaporates, minerals concentrate until only the salts remain. After thousands of years, enough salts have washed in to produce layer upon layer of salt crust.”