Black Canyon Chasm View #2
by Eric Rundle
Title
Black Canyon Chasm View #2
Artist
Eric Rundle
Medium
Photograph - Photographs
Description
On the North Rim of The Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park you will find this overlook. At Chasm view take a look in the top center of this image, you will see the south rim overlook of chasm View at 1,100 feet (335 m) it is the narrowest point rim to rim. Looking down it is the second deepest point at 1,820 feet (555 m). To get to the south rim it is a two to three hour drive.
Geology & Hydrology
The uplift and volcanism of the early to mid-Tertiary established the highland that would serve as the headwaters for the Gunnison River. Snowmelt from the Sawatch Range to the east, the West Elk Mountains to the north and the San Juans to the south provided an ample supply of water to what would eventually become the Gunnison Basin. Geologists believe that the modern Gunnison River became established in its current course about 10 to 15 million years ago, just after the last eruptions in the San Juans and West Elks. This coincides with the beginning of a period of rapid uplift of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau provinces that lie between the Rockies and the Sierra Nevada Range in California. To date, geologists are at a loss to explain the forces behind the uplifting of such an immense region. Whatever the cause, the uplift allowed the early Gunnison River to easily cut its way down through the thick layers of Tertiary volcanics and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks. Then about two million years ago, the river began to expose the much harder Precambrian basement rocks of the Gunnison Uplift, a block of crust that had been forced upwards during the Laramide Orogeny. Trapped in its own canyon, the Gunnison had no other choice but to battle the rocks beneath it. At the rate of about one inch per every hundred years (or the width of a human hair each year), the Gunnison slowly worked its way through the resistant rock, forming the narrow, steep-sided Black Canyon of the Gunnison. Only a high volume, high-velocity river like the Gunnison could produce such a breath-taking canyon!
Uploaded
February 1st, 2013
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Viewed 127 Times - Last Visitor from White Plains, NY on 01/19/2024 at 5:14 AM
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