Thursday, November 21, 2013

Birth of an Island

FirSmoke billows from a new islet off the coast of Nishinoshima, a small, uninhabited island in the Ogasawara chain off the coats of Tokyo.

First Earth was all rock, debris circling the sun that coalesced into a planet.

Then comets came, bringing water, covering much of the land (all? not sure).

Then volcanoes rose up from the ocean bottoms, creating land.

As plates moved, land masses moved and accreted onto larger landmasses.  Continents were born.

Here's a photo of the birth of an island:

Sunday, November 17, 2013

A not-so hallelujah day...

At 7:20 this morning, 22 men were working at the Revenue-Virginius Mine on Camp Bird Rd. near Mt. Sneffels when a blast occurred.




This historic mine was claimed in 1876, operating at its peak in 1880, closed in the 1980s, and reopened in 2012. 

It's near Yankee Boy Basin, on the way to Mt. Sneffels when you start in Ouray and then pass Camp Bird.  

From Telluride, you would go over Tomboy Pass from Telluride, then turn left on Camp Bird Rd. and go about a mile to this mine.

An article in the Telluride Watch last summer:



Early history of the Virginius Mine:


The Denver Post provides this summary of recent mining accidents in Colorado and the US:

"Before the Revenue-Virginius disaster, there were 34 fatalities at mines in 2013 in the United States, according to the federal Department of Labor. There have been 15 mining deaths in Colorado in the past decade, according to the department's Mine Safety and Health Administration."

The San Juan Mountains: silver and gold, beauty and danger.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Fireball

Flash--a fireball streaking across the sky toward Los Angeles International Airport.  

I thought it was a plane on fire about to crash, but then it vanished.

A few hours later I found out that a meteor had been sighted from Utah to southern California just before 8 pm.  

I was driving southeast on Sepulveda Blvd. at about 83rd Street when I saw it, wide as a yellow marker pen drawing a line across the black sky.  

Many times I've stayed up at night in the Rocky Mountains or the high desert to watch the Perseid or Leonid meteor shower, counting myself lucky to see a few falling stars.  

This was completely different--a stroke the width of a finger, bright yellow--easily visible while driving down a busy street filled with lights.

The meteor messenger was saying: You are not alone, people of Earth.  You are part of a solar system and galaxy.  

Heads up!

https://vine.co/v/hIeMDwijqUJ