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Little Bridge, Crack, Brimstone, but not Corkscrew
#11
Bluegreen kayak Wrote:Found another piece of wood going out. Where the heck did they come from?

Likely an old claim post. The entire Funeral Range and Black Mountains are full of prospects, mines and claims from the mining craze that swept Nevada and eastern California during the 1902-1907 time period. In addition to stone cairns, a 4”x4” wooden post was embedded in stone cairns to mark claims.

I’m not a big fan of slot canyons, but the colors were gorgeous. Glad you had a good time.
DAW
~When You Live in Nevada, "just down the road" is anywhere in the line of sight within the curvature of the earth.
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#12
Glad you got to hike Brimstone!! I've been thinking about doing that hike again when I eventually can get back to DV, remembering it was very nice. I don't remember that dry-fall before the fork being anywhere near that tall, so either my memory is incorrect or some gravel has washed out over the years--or, more likely, some combination of both.
Link to my DV trip reports, and map of named places in DV (official and unofficial): http://kaurijacobphotography.yolasite.com
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#13
Hey Bluegreen Im pretty sure I was wrong aboit the crinoids, those have like discs. But we saw a lot of fossils today and we are reading everything about rugose corals, maybe thats what you saw? ( Im not a paleontologist! I wish I knew more!)

I put brimstone in my to do list just couple of weeks ago, nice to see your report!
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#14
(2023-03-16, 07:46 PM)Daymoth Wrote: Hey Bluegreen Im pretty sure I was wrong aboit the crinoids, those have like discs. But we saw a lot of fossils today and we are reading everything about rugose corals, maybe thats what you saw? ( Im not a paleontologist! I wish I knew more!)

I put brimstone in my to do list just couple of weeks ago, nice to see your report!

Well, I enjoyed reading about crinoids after your comment, so thank you. I ran across something in another book about southwest geology: feeding traces called bioturbation, where organisms "root for nourishment in the fresh sand and mud." My find was probably too flat to be those.

Enjoy Brimstone - find the pavement on the north, it's easier.
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#15
(2023-03-16, 07:19 PM)Kauri Wrote: Glad you got to hike Brimstone!! I've been thinking about doing that hike again when I eventually can get back to DV, remembering it was very nice. I don't remember that dry-fall before the fork being anywhere near that tall, so either my memory is incorrect or some gravel has washed out over the years--or, more likely, some combination of both.

Thank you very much for your unofficial map and the great picture that showed me where to go. I frequently use your map to roam the park looking for places to go; it's a treasure.
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#16
Those eroded rocks are neat.  I don't think I've noticed anything quite like that before.
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#17
Those fossils look like burrows or feeding traces. The borrowed areas can look very different from surrounding rock!
Check me out on YouTube @ BetterGeology! https://www.youtube.com/c/BetterGeology

And my out-of-date website dvexplore.blogspot.com
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