Saturday, August 14, 2010

Geology Reconnaissance through UT- ID- WY Part 1: Craters of the Moon NM


My colleague and I recently got the "go ahead" to develop a geology field course this summer, something we've been doing to a lesser extent for several years as geology club advisors. We teach at a community college without a dedicated geology or geosciences program, but were interested to see if we could generate enough interest to run such a course as a fulfillment of a natural science course as part of another program, or simply to find some interested parties who might be interested in seeing and learning about some awesome geology. One of the challenges, I find, of teaching students who are not declared majors is that you are constantly trying to amaze your audience to convince them that studying rocks is cool. This is just the latest of my own personal songs and dances. :)

So in late July, we flew to Salt Lake City (a blog could be written about that leg of the trip entirely), spent a night in downtown Salt Lake, and departed the next morning for Craters of the Moon National Monument (COTM) in Idaho. As a New Yorker, my visions of Idaho mostly concerned potatoes, and that is certainly a segment of the state, but it is much cooler than I ever thought. There is just SOO much lava in Idaho, mostly associated with the Snake River flood basalts. En route to COTM, the road passes through the Idaho Nuclear Laboratory, or something to that effect, which is both funny and bizarre because of the nothing that surrounds you in all directions. Although I have been out west several times, I am always impressed with how much nothing there still is, in our age of over-population.



COTM was created by a series of basaltic lava flows about 2000 years ago. The volcanism was the result of extension in the North American Basin and Range province. Thinning crust resulted in melting and extrusion of multiple basaltic lava flows. Though Jessica, my colleague, and I, had been to COTM previously, one tends to look at things differently when preparing field assignments. The textural differences between some of the volcanic rocks at this location are striking. There are beautiful examples of pahoehoe and aa lava flows, in addition to the strikingly irridescent Blue Dragon flow, with higher concentrations of magnetite. Additionally, there are several spatter and cinder cones in the park, some visibly aligned along rift zones, as well as lava "caves," which formed from collapsed lava tubes. There are also some pretty great dead trees in the area. Jessica kept remarking how "tortured" the trees looked, and I had to agree. There are also some small flora growing in cracks in the lava... some organisms have easier lives than others, I guess.



We spent a few hours in Craters... a word of advice. EVERYTHING is black in COTM, lava and pavement, and there is very little shade. Temperatures are scorchingly hot in the summer. If this is a field stop of yours, plan it for the morning. En route to and from Craters is the teeny town of Arco, ID, which claims to be the first town powered exclusively from nuclear power. In the bedrock that overlooks Arco are a series of numbers spray painted on the rock. Starting back in the 1930s (I think), each graduating class would climb the rocks and add their graduation year to the others. For a good time, check out the Grand Motel and Mall... I nearly stayed there on a previous trip to COTM, where lodging is sketchy at best. We decided to find alternate plans when we saw all the signs in the front window: "For Sale," "For Lease," "Missing Children," etc., followed by boarded up windows and a couch randomly situated in the parking lot. Ahh, Arco. We stayed in the D&K Motel down the road (next to the Atomic Pickle Restaurant, no less) in that excurson, which was quite an improvement. However, for our July 2010 trip, we drove on to Jackson Hole, WY, to continue our trip in the Tetons the next day.

Paddling the ancestral Genesee


Today could have gone really well, or really poorly, and I'm happy to say that it was the former. My husband and I decided to take our twin daughters (3.5 yo) out to do one of our favorite outdoor activities, kayaking. We used to kayak fairly regularly before the kids arrived, but haven't made time to since then.

So we next realized that two tandem kayaks might not be the idea either, since someone is always arguing about who sits where, etc., so opted instead to rent a canoe. We headed to Bay Creek Paddling Center in Rochester, where we had previously rented kayaks. Bay Creek has very friendly staff and reasonable prices; I highly recommend them if you're looking for a fun way to spend a nice morning or afternoon. They seemed unimpressed with our pint-sized riders, which gave me some confidence that our endeavor wasn't necessarily doomed. The kids got a kick out of wearing life vests and seemed to enjoy the scenery, wildlife, and overall experience for over an hour, which is an eternity in toddler-years.

We started by paddling up Irondequoit Creek, which flows north and empties into Lake Ontario in Irondequoit Bay. While the water level was fairly high (neither of us remembered being so close to the Empire Blvd underpass on previous excursions), the flow was gentle, and we paddled for a bit though the meandering creek amid the cattails. While we never did find the otter my daughter was seeking, we did encounter a few families of ducks, a turtle sunning itself on a downed tree, a blue heron, and a few giant white swans.

Irondequoit Creek is a large, buried glacial valley just west of Rochester, NY. The Genesee River, the only river to completely cut through NYS, empties into Lake Ontario just to the east in Charlotte. However, the current channel for the Genesee River was created during the waning Late Wisconsin glaciation, when a moraine, or large pile of unsorted glacial sediment, was deposited in Portageville, NY, blocking the river and created a proglacial lake. It is during this time that the Genesee River cut a new path through Letchworth State Park, creating a series of three cataracts. Further deposition of glacial sediment near Avon, NY resulted in a diversion of the Genesee River yet again, this time from its ancient path through Irondequoit Creek and through the city of Rochester, again creating a series of three waterfalls as the river eroded through Silurian and Ordovician sedimentary layers.

The valley walls of the ancestral Genesee are easily visible paddling up the creek, as are large, poorly consolidated deposits of glacial channel sands. When we ventured into the bay a bit, a nice exposure of thinly bedded sand deposits are visible and relatively accessible by canoe or kayak on the east side of the bay.

All in all, a nice way to spend a day outdoors, see some cool geology, and wear out the children.