<html>
<head>
<style><!--
.hmmessage P
{
margin:0px;
padding:0px
}
body.hmmessage
{
font-size: 12pt;
font-family:Calibri
}
--></style></head>
<body class='hmmessage'><div dir='ltr'>Scott- I almost got there, once. It was during the nightly Gibbon road closures which meant a later start, and a forced turnaround and return to beat the barricade closure to return home (north). In fact that night I was one of the last cars through before the full complete closure of the road, which we remember didn't play out so well when the Arnica fire closed the Lake area roads too. It was a nice walk with little vertical; we didn't get as far as we had hoped, but I wish I had! <br><br>I'd be game to try again this summer; email me privately if anyone is interested. <br><br>MA<br><br>M.A. Bellingham<br>mabdepot@msn.com<br><br><div><hr id="stopSpelling">From: TSBryan@aol.com<br>Date: Wed, 12 Jun 2013 11:43:39 -0400<br>To: geysers@lists.wallawalla.edu<br>Subject: [Geysers] Strange feature<br><br>
<font id="ecxrole_document" color="#000000" face="Arial" size="2">
<div>For some reason -- probably has to do with being "stuck" in southern
Arizona for another three months -- I was using Google Earth to look at
places in Yellowstone. For some reason (no idea why, really) I zoomed in on the
Spruce Creek-Juniper Creek area, a few miles up Nez Perce Creek well beyond the
Morning Mist area.</div>
<div> </div>
<div>First, here is what Allen & Day (pp. 283-284) had to say about that
area:</div>
<div> </div>
<div> The southern branch of Nez Perce Creek is formed
by the junction of Spruce and Juniper Creeks, cold mountain streams which
receive no warm water till they near the meadow where they unite. Three-quarters
of a mile up Spruce Creek, the explorer comes upon an old sheet of siliceous
sinter, along the western border of which a mild type of acid activity of
limited extent still persists.</div>
<div> On the banks of Juniper Creek there is nothing of
a thermal character except a few quiet pools embedded in ancient sinter, and
along a little tributary of the creek from the south, a small number of acid
springs, characterized by meager sulphur deposits, yield not more than 0.1 sec.
ft. of warm water. --end--</div>
<div> </div>
<div>OK, so two Google Earth photos are attached. The first serves as a map to
the area, with the trailhead, Morning Mist/Culex, and a really odd looking
feature marked. The second photo is a close up of that strange feature, which my
wife calls "The Alien."</div>
<div> </div>
<div>What is it? Any explorers out there game of a 15 mile (round trip) hike?
(Won't be me!)</div>
<div> </div>
<div>Scott Bryan</div></font><br>_______________________________________________
Geysers mailing list
Geysers@lists.wallawalla.edu
https://lists.wallawalla.edu/mailman/listinfo/geysers</div>                                            </div></body>
</html>