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GC1AA9W

Earthcache Sandstone Peak – The top of the Santa Monica Mtns!
A  cache by SAMO-NPS       Hidden: 3/18/2008  
Size: Size: Not chosen (Not chosen)      Difficulty: 1 out of 5      Terrain: 3.5 out of 5 (1 is easiest, 5 is hardest)
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N/S ? ??.??? W/E ??? ??.???  []
In California, United States

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Welcome to the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area EarthCaching Program. This earthcache site is available year round. This cache is on trail. Please do not travel off trail for your safety and preservation of resources.

Located at Circle X Ranch in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. Access to this cache is by way of trail from either National Park Service land or State Park land. Mountain bikes are not permitted for travel to this cache.

Information regarding Circle X Ranch and Sandstone Peak.

The two main trails to access this cache are the Mishe Mokwa Trail and the Sandstone Peak Trail. There is free parking at either trail head. Pets are permitted on a leash no longer than 6 feet (2 meters). Bicycles are not recommended on the trails at Circle X Ranch. Horses are not permitted to this cache. Camping is restricted to the Group Campground only. Permits are required for camping.

• Circle X Ranch is open from sunrise to sunset daily.

• All plant material, rocks, animals, and historical features are protected by law and may not be collected or disturbed.

Safety information:
• Poison Oak can be found in this area. It is identified by three leaves ranging in color from green to crimson. The plant is deciduous, so it does lose its leaves in the winter.
•Watch out for mountains lions, rattlesnakes and ticks.

Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area Visitor Center Information:
Open daily from 9 AM – 5PM.
Address: 401 West Hillcrest Drive, Thousand Oaks, CA, 91360
Phone number: 805-370-2301
In emergency: dial 911

Geological information

This former Boy Scout Ranch is home to Sandstone Peak, the highest point in the Santa Monica Mountains with an elevation of 3,111’ (948m). From here a view of Los Angeles, the Oxnard Plain, the Valleys of Southern California, and the Channel Islands can be seen. In 1948, the Boy Scouts acquired the land from a generous donor and named the mountain in his honor. The scouts undoubtedly scrambled up, over, and around this rusty colored ridge. Once the National Park Service acquired Circle X, they changed the name back to the previous name of Sandstone Peak which may seem strange since it is not in fact “sandstone” and there is not any sandstone on the Circle X site.

But why would it be referred to as Sandstone Peak in the first place? It was not formed from ancient riverbeds or fossils or even from sediments from far away. The rock that makes up Sandstone Peak is igneous in origin. The word igneous is from the Latin word, ignis, which means “from fire”. That means that Sandstone Peak was created by a volcano!

First, let us picture what the area was like when Sandstone Peak formed. Imagine yourself 24 million years ago. The dinosaurs are long gone. There are no Santa Monica Mountains, just broad plains that extend from the middle of California to the coast. In fact, much of the land that makes up the Los Angeles area was underwater at the time. Then a short period of time later, geologically speaking, about nine million years, the volcanoes that created the Santa Monica Mountains and the Channel Islands started to erupt, however the lava only oozed underwater at first.

Yet about 15 million years ago the eruptions became explosive. Volcanoes similar to the eruptions of the Cascades in Washington and Oregon or the Andes in South America were a common occurrence. For another 3 million years, the mountains continued to grow to over 10,000 feet high. Three times taller than they are today!
Sandstone Peak is in the Conejo Volcanics Formation (16.1 to 13.1 million years old) and is composed of igneous rocks that include:
• dacitic breccias, andesitic breccias, basaltic breccias
• andesitic flows
• basaltic rocks

Look at the time scale below. About 24 million years ago the Lower Topanga Formation (composed of marine sediment and non-marine sediment) began to develop. There was an interruption in the deposition of the Lower Topanga Formation, such that no geological materials are preserved from this time. This is called an unconformity. The end of the unconformity was marked by the beginning of the Conejo Volcanics and Diabase Intrusions about16.6 million years ago. About 13 million years ago, the Conejo Volcanic eruptions ceased allowing the Upper Topanga Formation to develop. Although the Conejo Volcanics split the Topanaga Formations both physically and in geological time, there is no sandstone at Sandstone Peak!

Geological Time Scale

Geological Time Scale


After 13 million years of erosion the amazing 10,000’ Sandstone Peak is a mere 3111’. The remaining colorful, reddish rock is the heart and core that gives us evidence for a process millions of years in the making!

If you want to explore more about how the mountains formed, then head down the trail to Inspiration Point EarthCache.

To log this EarthCache complete the following:

Sign your name in the register at the cache and put earthcache next to it.

Click the link below to take the quiz and get your EarthCache certificate:

Sandstone Peak Quiz

1. What type of rock is Sandstone Peak? Igneous, Metamorphic, Sedimentary?

2. Look for the monument at Sandstone Peak. Who is the generous donor the mountain was once named after?

3. Why do you think the peak was named Sandstone Peak?

Sources for this cache are:

Dibblee Jr., Thomas W., Ehrenspeck, Helmut E., 1990, Geologic Map of the Point Mugu and Triunfo Pass Quadrangles, Ventura and Los Angeles Counties, California, Dibblee Geological Foundation, Map #DF-29

National Park Service, Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, Thousand Oaks, CA, 91360

Nicholson, Craig, Sorlien, Christopher C., Atwater, Tanya, Crowell, John C., Luyendyk, Bruce P., 1994, Microplate capture, rotation of the western Transverse Ranges, and initiation of the San Andreas transform as a low-angle fault system, Journal of Geology, v. 22, p. 491-495

Additional Hints ( Decrypt ) 

Decryption Key
A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z
(letter above equals below,
and vice versa)

Guvf vf gur uvturfg crnx va gur Fnagn Zbavpn Zbhagnvaf. Gurer vf n zbahzrag ng gur gbc. (Decrypted Hints)




Find...


Geological Time Scale

The geological time scale for this cache.

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 Attributes
no campfires no bikes ticks! snakes! poison plants! significant hike scenic view picnic tables available parking available dogs allowed blank blank
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 Inventory

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 Bookmark Lists
Backbone Trail by Don_J
California Earthcaches as of 05/15/2008 by Flag_Mtn_Hkrs

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Logged Visits ( 45 total. Visit the Gallery (4 images) )

Found it44Publish Listing1

Warning. Spoilers may be included in the descriptions or links.
Cache find counts are based on the last time the page generated.


Cache Logs
 October 31 by cahikerchick (1538 found)
Out hiking and caching with VCTrails.

[view this log]
 October 31 by VCTrails (1658 found)
It's a beautiful day to hike in Circle X Ranch! The peak register is full but someone put in an extra sheet of paper and we signed that. Can't take the quiz, "Page not found" TFTC!

[view this log]
 October 29 by dbir (1027 found)
It's a beautiful cool day (finally!), and this is the first time I've been up here for maybe 20 years. Much nicer now. Thank you, NPS. Signed log as instructed.

[view this log]
 August 22 by paleolith (433 found)
I decided to take advantage of the clouds to knock off the caches on this section of the BBT. Last time on top was about a year ago. The new steps built by volunteers are great! Today I was joined on top by two young ladies, but it was too early for the crowds. Did the quiz last month. Headed on over to Inspiration Point û How the mountains formed!

Edward

[view this log]

 July 5 by pianofab (422 found)
Gorgeous day... hiked up Yerba Buena to Sandstone Peak, Inspiration Point, and all the way to Boney. TFTC

[view this log]

There are more logs. View them all on one page

Current time: 11/21/2009 11:15:26 AM
Last Updated: 11/15/2009 1:04:01 AM
Rendered: From Database
Coordinates are in the WGS84 datum

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