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Day 10- Scotty’s Castle (Death Valley)

Day 10- Scotty’s Castle (Death Valley)

By on Mar 1, 2015 in California | 0 comments

From the Death Valley Website http://www.nps.gov/deva/learn/historyculture/scottys-castle.htm Hidden in the green oasis of Grapevine Canyon in far northern Death Valley, the Death Valley Ranch, or Scotty’s Castle as it is more commonly known, is a window into the life and times of the Roaring ’20s and Depression ’30s. It was and is an...

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Day 10 – Rhyolite Ghost Town (Death Valley)

Day 10 – Rhyolite Ghost Town (Death Valley)

By on Mar 1, 2015 in California | 0 comments

From the Death Valley Website http://www.nps.gov/deva/learn/historyculture/rhyolite-ghost-town.htm Her birth was brought about by Shorty Harris and E. L. Cross, who were prospecting in the area in 1904. They found quartz all over a hill, and as Shorty describes it “… the quartz was just full of free gold… it was the original bullfrog rock… this...

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Day 10 – Artist Drive (Death Valley)

Day 10 – Artist Drive (Death Valley)

By on Mar 1, 2015 in California | 0 comments

NO surprise…this was Kaatje’s favourite place in   the park.  Artist’s Drive rises up to the top of an alluvial fan fed by a deep canyon cut into the Black Mountains. Artist’s Palette is on the face of the Black Mountains and is noted for having various colors of rock. These colors are caused by the oxidation of different metals (red, pink...

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Day 10 – Hiking The Golden Canyon (Death Valley)

Day 10 – Hiking The Golden Canyon (Death Valley)

By on Mar 1, 2015 in California | 0 comments

What existed before Death Valley?  Therocks of Golden Canyon provide evidence of an older basin. The tilted layers surrounding us were nearly horizontal when they were initially deposited. Movement along the major faults of Death Valley has created a large fold. In the process, these basin sediments have been uplifted and tilted, and erosion now carries sediment out...

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Day 10- Ubehebe Crater

Day 10- Ubehebe Crater

By on Mar 1, 2015 in California | 0 comments

Ubehebe Crater is a large volcanic crater 600 feet deep and half a mile across. How did these crater originate? Ubehebe is known as maar volcano.  A maar is a broad, low-relief volcanic crater that is caused by a phreatomagmatic eruption, which is an explosion caused by groundwater coming into contact with hot lava or magma.  The intense heat flashes the water into...

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