Showing posts with label Vermillion Cliffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vermillion Cliffs. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

May 20, 2012. Rock Houses.

We're still traveling the Vermillion Cliffs Highway
 in Arizona and here we are at Rock Houses.

Gotta stop and check it out.


 The erosion of sandstone formations leaves a variety 
of crevices, caves and overhangs.
Over time, travelers and residents found
creative ways to use these natural features 
as temporary or permanent shelters.


 Mr. Hawthorne checks out one of the Rock Houses.



The story of the Rock Houses
begins during the Great Depression.
Around 1927, Blanche Russell, 
a former Zeigfield Follies dancer,
gave up her highly successful career back East
to tend to her husband, Bill,
 who was suffering from tuberculosis.
The couple packed up and moved to the southwest.

The Russells' car broke down
 as they traveled through this area,
near the big rocks.
Forced to camp overnight,
Blanche decided she liked the scenery so much
that she bought property and stayed.
The couple threw up a lean-to of tarpaper and boards
against the largest rock.
The stone buildings under these littered, balanced boulders
were built shortly after, in the 1930s.

The Russells stumbled onto a unique
 money-making operation here.
Blanche started serving food to passers-by
in return for labor as the house got larger.
Soon, the couple had a full-scale restaurant
and trading post on their hands.

They also catered to the Mormons, 
living in Arizona,
who traveled through this area
to have their marriages sanctified
at the temple in St. George, Utah.

After about ten years of living in this isolation,
Blanche tired of it,
and sold it to a local rancher, Jack Church,
who added his own personal touch 
by turning the restaurant into a bar during World War II.

In 1943,  third owners, Art and Evelyn Greene,
purchased the land. 
They kept the old dwelling,
which then consisted of eight buildings and a gas generator.

The Greens eventually opened the new
Cliff Dwellings Lodge in the early 50s.

The Greenes used the lodge as a base for some of 
the first guided boat tours of the Colorado River,
run by Earl Johnson, who was 81 at the time.
Johnson recalled it was hard living,
especially during the A-bomb tests 
in the Nevada desert.
The subsurface vibrations nearly knocked
the largest rock off its mooring. 
As Johnson said,
"It was pretty lonely since there was no telephone
and we could only get two radio stations on a good day.
But at least we had our beer license and
Conoco serviced the gas pump.
We'd go arrowhead hunting around there to pass the time."

79-year old Evelyn Greene said that her mother-in-law
did most of the cooking for the restaurant.
It became a favorite for Boy Scout troops 
who went on outings in the area.
A tour bus also stopped three times a day
as tourists took in the unusual surroundings.

Greene also worried about the area:
"It got really scary, though, because all the rocks
up there were wearing away at the bottoms.  
When we finally moved, we didn't do it
a bit too soon."

A waitress at the current Cliff Dwellers restaurant
gripes about all the rattlesnakes in the area,
saying she's nearly stepped on seven of them 
in the short distance between her apartment and the restaurant
in the past three months.




 
Inside looking out.





I have a funny story about this picture.

I posted this on Rosie's Facebook page,
with my usual caption,
"Where's Rosie?" 

One of my friends and readers, Lori in Michigan,
commented on that post,
"At the Comfort Inn.
For her Freebie!!!"

Hee!
Good one, Lori.
Mr. Hawthorne and I both got a kick out of that.
Thanks for the laughs!









The Indians set up their wares
anywhere and everywhere.


Stay tuned for dinosaurs!

Monday, May 28, 2012

May 20, 2012. Vermillion Cliffs.

We're driving from Cedar City, Utah, to Tuba City, Arizona.
Enjoy the Vermillion Cliffs.

But first, a geology lesson
about the Grand Staircase.

The Grand Staircase refers to an immense sequence of sedimentary rock layers that stretch north
from the Grand Canyon, through Zion National Park, and into Bryce Canyon National Park.
In the 1870s, geologist Clarence Dutton conceptualized this region as a huge stairway ascending out of the bottom of the Grand Canyon northward,
 with the cliff edge of each layer forming giant steps. 


Edges exposed by uplift are susceptible to erosion.
 In Utah, the southern edges of the High Plateaus
have eroded into the cliffs of the Grand Staircase.







  • A Grand Canyon
  • B Chocolate Cliffs
  • C Vermillion Cliffs
  • D White Cliffs
  • E Zion Canyon
  • F Gray Cliff
  • G Pink Cliffs
  • H Bryce Canyon




Deformation, Uplift, and the Grand Staircase
Horizontal compression related to the formation of the Rocky Mountains deformed these rocks.  Then volcanic materials from the north and west covered part of the region:  black rocks at the mouth of nearby Red Canyon and on the Sevier Plateau - to the north -  still protect the softer underlying layers.  About 10 million years ago, the Earth pulled apart, moving and tilting great blocks along north-south trending fault lines.  Layers that were once connected then became displaced vertically by several thousand feet,
 thereby forming the High Plateaus of Utah.

Older Cretaceous layers now rested side by side with younger Tertiary layers across the fault lines.  Streams began to remove the sediments that had been deposited by their ancestors.  Working on the weakened edges of the upthrown blocks, water gradually removed the uppermost Tertiary layers and exposed the Cretaceous rocks once again.  At that point these drab marine sediments lay on the surface of the land side by side with the brightly colored rock formed from the deposits of freshwater lakes and streams.

 





Researching the Cliffs,
I just read that Huff Post had a recent article
on the Vermillion Cliffs -
about National Geographic's February article
about the Vermillion Cliffs.


Enjoy my pictures.















We're looking at millions of years of work here.