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Grand Views of Canyon Country
48 pp., 8.5x11", maps, color photographs $9.95 ISBN
0-937407-00-3

Twenty essays and 65 stunning photographs by landscape photographer
George H. H. Huey provide an introduction to the canyon country around
Moab, Utah. Grand Views highlights destinations that can be reached
in a family car. Each essay focuses on either the natural or cultural
history of a specific location, such as Delicate Arch, Dead Horse Point
State Park, and Upheaval Dome. Topics include why are there so many
arches, ranching history, John Wesley Powell, and formation of the La
Sal Mountains.
A Few Thoughts on This Book
These essays grew out of my nine years of writing and teaching about
the desert. The idea that a desert is a barren wasteland is just wrong.
The rock is obvious, but when you look closely you discover a wide array
of plants and animals, each intricately adapted to their habitat. You
also quickly realize that the desert is as fragile as it is beautiful.
I was lucky to see canyon country repeatedly over all seasons. I realized
that when we visit a place once we leave with a mental snapshot, not
at all worthy of the landscape. As a park ranger I was always amazed
when people told me, "We saw Delicate Arch the first time. We don't
need to go back." Landscape changes over time, but more significantly,
we change over time and view things differently. I hope these essays
will help people develop a deeper appreciation and respect for the desert
and that they will want to learn more about it.
From the book:
Delicate Arch has become an icon. From license plates to calendars
to laminated place mats, its likeness has been plastered onto every
imaginable surface. Even so, few, if any, images can capture the full
magnitude of Delicate Arch. Despite the fact that most visitors to
the arch already carry in their head an image of the span, it rarely
fails to meet expectations. More importantly each of us carries away
a different vision of the structure.
If you ask a geologist about Delicate Arch she might say: "It is
all that remains of a fin formed by the collapse of a salt anticline.
Also, notice that the top of the arch is made from a different material
than the bulk of the structure. This harder cap is key to the arch's
shape because it has helped protect Delicate from additional erosion."
A photographer would give a different response: "Go see it at sunset
when the low-angle light electrifies the rock, changing it from orange
to red to salmon in only a few minutes. The interplay of shape and
light creates an ever-changing palette. The magic of the arch is that
a photographer could spend years here and always find new and intriguing
angles to shoot."
A philosopher might point out that "The sheer improbability of Delicate
invites us to inquire into forces that work in ways far beyond our
understanding. The arch is so fantastic that we may feel belittled
or humbled by nature. On the other hand, we may want to rejoice that
such simple forces as erosion and gravity could conspire to produce
such a sublime visage."
A first-time visitor might simply say "Wow!" and thus summarize
all thoughts into one globally understandable word.
Delicate Arch Viewpoint offers another perspective. The gentle trek
affords the time to focus on the surrounding landscape. On the way
up, you pass through one of the park's most unusual rock layers, the
Morrison Formation. The green, red, and white beds consist predominately
of sand and silt deposited in lakes and streams that came and went
in the region over millions of years. The green-blue hills near the
Delicate Arch Trailhead parking lot contain iron-rich volcanic ash
that fell into lakes. In the oxygen-free environment of the lake bottom,
the iron turned green. Had it been in an oxygen-rich environment,
the iron would have turned rusty red.
Boulders of milky white chert, a type of quartz that precipitated
out of the lake water, dot the viewpoint trail. Also known as flint,
chalcedony, or jasper, chert has been used for thousands of years
for projectile points and arrow heads.
You can see Delicate Arch for most of the walk up to
the viewpoint. At the top of the Viewpoint trail, Delicate Arch confronts
you from across a small canyon. The view from here is of the arch in
context. It reveals what makes the arch truly remarkablethe sum
of the parts that makes that single spectacular element whole.
All material©David B. Williams 2000,2001,
2002.
All rights reserved, no form of reproduction is
authorized without prior arrangement with David B. Williams.
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