The Ruby Mountains of northeastern Nevada don’t fit a number of Nevada stereotypes. They’re much better watered than most other mountain ranges in the Great Basin, supporting abundant streams and even alpine lakes. The bedrock is also largely granite or metamorphic rock, very different from the volcanic and sedimentary rocks that underlie many other Nevada ranges. And they were heavily glaciated in the Pleistocene, so they have glacial landforms reminiscent of the Sierra Nevada. Lamoille Canyon, in particular, is often called “Nevada’s Yosemite.” It’s a large glacial canyon that…