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Salt Creek – Why is it here? EarthCache

Hidden : 5/2/2011
Difficulty:
2.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:

Salt Creek is a perennial stream that owes its existence to groundwater and the configuration of the underlying rock.

There is ample parking at the end of a short unpaved gravel road. All cars should be able to reach the parking lot in dry weather. A boardwalk is provided to explore the Salt Creek area so please remain on the boardwalk.

As with all locations in National Parks, everything is protected, so leave it as you found it.

Salt Creek is a perennial stream that begins a little north of the coordinates and disappears south of the parking lot. As the name implies, the water is quite salty having picked up minerals from rocks upstream. West of the parking lot, the water evaporates or percolates back down into the ground, leaving salts at the surface. So, why does the groundwater come to the surface in this area?

To answer that, we need to take a look at the environment five to six million years ago. This is long before Death Valley and formed and the often mentioned Lake Manly. An even older lake filled the basin depositing thick layers of silt and clay. These sediments were later buried and turned to rock creating the Miocene Furnace Creek Formation.

Through the tectonic events the affected the region, including the stretching that formed the Basin and Range Province (see Dante's View) and the Badwater Basin, the Furnace Creek Formation was folded and faulted. In this area, the thick impermeable sediments are warped up into an anticline (rocks folded in an “A” shape). Upstream, the impermeable sediments begin to rise up from deep underground and a fault cuts through the area. Beyond the fault is a thick layer of highly permeable alluvium. To the east of parking lot, the Furnace Creek Formation dives back down into the ground and the surface returns to alluvial sediments. The area of Salt Creek is at the top of the anticline.

Groundwater flowing through the alluvium upstream encounters the fault and impermeable sediments and are forced up to the surface. The water then flows over the apex of the fold staying on top of the impermeable lake sediments of the Furnace Creek Formation. As the water flows back over alluvium, the creek water percolates back down into the ground.

Logging requirements:
Send me a note with:

  1. The text "GC2VG9H Salt Creek – Why is it here?" on the first line
  2. The number (including non-cachers) and names of the geocachers in your group.
  3. Based on the informational sign, what animals frequented the ancient lake that deposited the Furnace Creek Formation?
  4. Looking at the cliff face behind the informational sign, how steeply inclined, and in what direction are the layers of the Furnace Creek Formation tilting? li>

The following sources were used to generate this cache:

  • Spear, Steven G. Ph.D., 2009, Death Velley Geology, A Field Guide and Virtual Tour of the Geology of Death Velly National Park and Environs, California and Nevada, Last Updated: August 25, 2009 http://www.palomar.edu/geology/DVWeb.htm
  • Snow, J. Kent, and Daniel R. Lux, Tectono-sequence stratigraphy of Tertiary rocks in the Cottonwood Mountains and north Death Valley area, California and Nevada, in Cenozoic Basins of the Death Valley Region, The Geological Society of America, Special Paper 333, Lauren A Wright and Bennie W. Troxel eds. 1999

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