Colorado Bound
Here we are hitting America's Loneliest Highway out across Nevada toward Colorado. We have been trying to find the right opportunity to return to Colorado. The last time we were…
Here we are hitting America's Loneliest Highway out across Nevada toward Colorado. We have been trying to find the right opportunity to return to Colorado. The last time we were…
We arrived in Salt Lake City just in time to see the spring flowers planted around Temple Square. This is an amazing sight. The first day I walked through Temple…
WATERPOCKET FOLD, that’s a new term I learned about when we visited Capital Reef National Park.
This is how the National Park Services describes this phenomenon:
A nearly 100-mile long warp in the Earth’s crust, the Waterpocket Fold is a classic monocline: a regional fold with one very steep side in an area of otherwise nearly horizontal layers. A monocline is a “step-up” in the rock layers. The rock layers on the west side of the Waterpocket Fold have been lifted more than 7,000 feet (2,134 m) higher than the layers on the east. Major folds are almost always associated with underlying faults. The Waterpocket Fold formed between 50 and 70 million years ago when a major mountain building event in western North America, the Laramide Orogeny, reactivated an ancient buried fault. When the fault moved, the overlying rock layers were draped above the fault and formed a monocline.