Thursday,
April 5th, 2018 to Monday, 9th April;
Cottonwood Canyon
in the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument.
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After
five days of not seeing or hearing a vehicle, I left my Buckskin Mountain
campsite, and slowly came down from the mountain; slowly being the operative
word as that road is a desperate four miles of rocks, and ruts, and ledges and
strange angles. Three miles along the
way I spotted an old quarry just off the east side of the road, or so I
thought. It turned out to be Eagle Sink,
and is a natural feature, although it looks for all the world like an abandoned
quarry. I never saw it going in last
Saturday, as I was concentrating on the road. “Rattlesnake heaven,” according
to the lady at the BLM Office down Hwy 89 from there. I expect they'll be out soon, as it's warming
up in these parts. Just a few miles to
the east, after rejoining the highway, there's the road to Paria Township site,
and also near the site of the movie set of the small town towards the end of
“The Outlaw Josie Wales.” Nothing there
now, except some info signs, a loo, a picnic table, and a lot of interesting
geology.
Eagle
Sink … evidently rattlesnake heaven … saw not a one. |
On the way out from the old movie set. |
Farther
east over the ridge from Old Paria, is Cottonwood Wash, and yet more
interesting geology, and I have a small publication all about it. Tonight's camp is about 12 miles up the wash,
next to a large slab of Jurassic Entrada Sandstone, across a small valley from
several hogbacks of Cretaceous Dakota Sandstone, with the stars shining
brightly. On the way in I stopped to
gather oysters for my supper, but the oyster-bed turned out to be ninety-some
million years old; just a tad past their sell-by date, so I left these
petrified suckers be … damn, coulda used some shellfish for me tea!
Between
my Pinkie & thumb is a gap of 60 million years in the strata; this is known as an unconformity. |
Petrified Oysters. |
What left these tracks? |
Oh! You did. |
Local
lounge lizard … the larger of the two types in this area. |
While breakfasting the next morning, I was looking at the sloping strata of the Dakota Sandstone across the valley, and wondering if the oyster-beds were also in evidence there. After breakfast I drove through Dakota hogbacks and took a look. Sure enough, there were the oyster-beds at the junction of the Dakota Sandstone and the Tropic Shale (they were also found again two miles back down the road, when I went back for a look at the Geology I had passed by last evening). Here the strata is steeply sloped to the east, whereas 9.5 miles back down the road where I first encountered them the strata was still level. Here the rock layers have been bent over the East Kaibab Monocline along an underground fault, much as a tablecloth over the edge of a table, as the Grand Staircase Escalante to the west of this fault line has been uplifted. Cottonwood Wash, up which I am driving, follows this fault line, and the tilted strata along here has formed a series of hogbacks through erosion, and is known as the Cockscomb for its resemblance to the serrated comb on the head of a chicken.
Entering Hackberry Canyon. |
Cross-bedded
Navajo Sandstone … these are ancient dunes. |
Some sort of Penstemon. |
Much
of the time you are walking in the stream, which on this day was half inch deep
for the most part, and where slightly deeper easily stepped across.
To
the east and west of Cottonwood wash the rock layers lie level, and the tilted
layers along the Cockscomb are only a couple of miles or so in width. I observed this first hand by taking a walk
west through Hackberry Canyon for three miles.
At the beginning of the hike the strata is sharply tilted, but by the
end of it has leveled out. By the time I
turned around where the Chinle formations were in evidence, I had walked
through 60 million years of time, to when the early dinosaurs were
inconsequential creatures (225 million years ago), from when they had become
the large sauropods and carnivores at the beginning of my walk. As I retraced my steps back down the canyon,
I was now proceeding forwards in time, and at about the 190 million year area,
I managed to find the boulder from the Moenave formation, that had some early
dinosaur tracks on it. This beastie who
made these tracks was about six feet in height, so I reckon my bear spray might
well stop it, should I encounter one next time I use my time machine, once it's
repaired.
I
brought out the colours in this one, but with the naked eye and it fluttering along, it looks black with yellow trimming. |
About a mile into the Canyon. |
The
leaves within the canyon were further along than those outside of it. |
Here
the Canyon widens out at about 1½ miles in. |
The
lower slopes (in above photo), are of
the Chinle formation and about 60 million years older than the Navajo Sandstone
at the canyon entrance. The Red cliffs above
the Chinle slopes are Jurassic Moenave and Kayenta formations, with the whiter
Navajo on the skyline. Note that by the
time we reach this point in the Canyon, the strata has leveled out, indicating we
have passed through the strata draped over the buried fault that lies beneath
Cottonwood Canyon, that I had driven up the day before and where I am now camped.
Small
dinosaur tracks in a Monave formation boulder … my knife about 10”. |
Denizen. |
Sorry
to have bored you silly with all the Geology, but that is much of what the
Southwest is all about … you can’t ignore it.
And gaining a bit of knowledge about what I am seeing, whether geology,
plants, wildlife, or the ancient ruins I encounter, all enhance these
experiences. That's why I was pleased as
punch when I took what little I had learned about the first oyster bed I
encountered, and idly wondered if they might be in the same situation near my
campsite, and then found that they were!
About a mile to go. |
Almost back out of Hackberry Canyon. |
But
apart from the Geology lesson, the walk through Hackberry Canyon was beautiful;
splashing through the shallow streambed (managing to step over those channels
that were more than an inch deep); observing my fourth wild flower in bloom
this Spring (some variety of red Penstamen); noting that the new leaves on the
Cottonwoods were slightly more advanced in the more sheltered, narrow depths of
the Canyon, than at either end; spotting black butterflies, with yellow wing
edges, that on close inspection through my binoculars, turned out to be not so
much black, as a deep purple russet, and as the direction of the light on it
changed, there seemed to be a pattern similar to a Small Tortoiseshell
Butterfly, I was familiar with in England … but the naked eye impression is of
black and yellow. Yes … it was a good
walk. I returned to my secluded camp of
the previous night, only about a half mile from the Hackberry Canyon Trailhead.
View from my campsite … hogbacks are evident. |
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