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The Great Sand Dunes in Alamosa, Colorado BRENDAN FRERICH The Agenda • The Trip • Geologic Timeline • Formation and Erosion/Weathering • • Tectonic Activity Erosion and Weathering • The End Result • • Wetlands vs. Desert Building of the Great Sand Dunes The Trip • On Sunday October 25, 2015 I went with my father to Great Sand Dunes National Park, near the town of Alamosa in Southern Colorado. • We explored the visitor’s center, exploring the areas geology and culture. • The Great Sand Dunes are found in the San Luis Valley, at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo mountain range. On the eastern side of the valley are the San Juan mountains The Clovis Native Americans lived in this area for thousands of years, calling it the land that moves back and forth. They used Ponderosa pine trees (right) for food and medicine. (3) Examples of the rock that was broken up to become the sand in the dunes. While the majority is plain stone like quartz and sandstone some of the sand is made from amethyst and garnet. The Trip (cont.) • The Dunes, which can reach 750 ft. in height, cover an area of 30 sq. miles (2) • Visitor’s such as myself can hike in to the mountains of sand • Medano Creek plays and important role in maintaining the landmark Geologic Time:Precambrian 4,600-600 million years ago Rio Grand Rift Island arcs collide with the northern landmass, creating the base of gneiss (5) Paleozoic 550-250 million years ago The Ancestral Rockies form at the collision of Gondwana and Laurentia (5) Uplifts and unconformities occur. Paleozoic Seas wash away many layers of sediment (5) Mesozoic 250-70 million years ago • The Mesozoic era is a massive unconformity in the Rocky Mountain area, as for most of the Cretaceous the land was covered by a sea. Many rock layers were washed away, leaving little fossil record of the era. (5) Cenozoic 70-0 million years ago Rio Grande Rift Stops, Sangres uplift continues (5) Especially fast period of expansion along the Rift The eruptions slow and release lighter materials, eg higher amounts of ash, finishing the San Juan Range(1) La Garita Caldera Erupts(1) Rio Grande Rift forms, and begins to pull apart the land. Small igneous intrusions in the Sangre’s are a result of rifting Plates collide, Sangre Uplift begins, as well as the formation of the rest of the Rockies (5) Recent Changes: 2 million years ago to present • Starting 1.8 million years ago glaciers formed repeatedly, carving out the Sangre de Cristos. Each time the glaciers receded they left till called Bull Lake. (5) • 30,000-12,000 years ago, the final expansion and recession of the glaciers left glacial till, that is at this point only slightly weathered. These younger deposits are called Pinedale.(5) Formation, Erosion, and Weathering • Tectonic Activity • • La Garita Caldera and the San Juan Mountains Sangre de Cristo Uplift • Erosion and Weathering Root/Frost Wedging • Mountain Streams • Saltation • La Garita Caldera Tectonic Forces • Roughly 35-30 million years ago the La Garita Caldera erupted. It was really a series of eruptions of mafic material that formed the San Juan mountains.(1) • 30-26 million years ago the eruptions consisted of more ash, and less thick lava, completing the formation of the San Juan range.(1) The yellow are represent the main caldera, and the dark red areas represent smaller ones that formed nearby. The red shading is the area affected. Rio Grande Rift Tectonic Activity • Roughly 26 million years ago the Earth began to pull apart where the San Luis now is. The Rio Grande Rift acted like a rift valley, however it was more localized. Con-Con convergence was creating mountains at roughly the same time, and it is not understood why rifting was occurring. As the valley stretched, igneous intrusions pushed into the Sangre Range. The Rift did not cause the Sangre uplift, but helped it along. It also formed a basin for water to flow into. When these rivers and lakes dried up it left dry, mobile sediment that was carried to the Sangres to create the first Dunes.(5) Sangre de Cristo Uplift Tectonic Activity • Unlike the San Juan mountains, the Sangres are not volcanic, and formed in a similar way to the rest of the Rockies. In the Cretaceous and Tertiary time periods a Continental-Continental collision of plates created the mountains, which were later carved out by glaciers. (5) Natural Wedging (Weathering) Rock can break up easily when something breaks it from the inside. Wedging in the Rocky Mountains comes in two main types, frost and root. Stone is broken off into streams, and onto slopes, providing what eventually becomes sand for the Dunes. FROST WEDGING ROOT WEDGING • Water expands when it freezes. Water seeps • The fine tips of tree roots work their way into into cracks or pores in rock. When the liquid a crack in rock. As the root grows it extends, freezes it expands, pushing the rock apart, the lengthening the fissure, and expands, fissure growing larger each freeze thaw cycle, widening it, until the rock gives way. breaking stone apart. Mountain Streams (Erosion and Weathering) EROSION WEATHERING • As stone is carried • Rocks of all sizes get dropped into downstream it will streams in the mountains of Colorado. bounce against other In the spring runoff the water can carry stones, roll on the bed of particles of all sizes downstream. Upper the stream. This constant Sand Creek and Medano Creek carry motion and battering on material to the Sand Dunes. In this other rocks breaks the stream that feeds the Dunes, you can particles into ever smaller see rounded boulders. The sharp edges particles in a form of have worn away, and been carried mechanical weathering. downstream. Eventually it can carve out V shaped valleys, and in the case of Zapata Falls in the San Luis Valley, small caves (right). Saltation (Erosion and Weathering) EROSION WEATHERING • Saltation is the movement of particles over uneven ground by turbulent wind. Wind carries particles deposited in the San Luis valley across the valley, and releases them in the dunes.(2) • While the wind blows particles hit each other and drag on the ground, such as in a stream, and are ground finer and finer until they become the powdery sand found in the Dunes.(2) The End Result • Ecosystems • • Animals specific to the Dunes Wetlands • Building of the Great Sand Dunes Great Sand Dunes Ecosystem • (4)Many organisms are unique to the Sand Dunes, such as the: Great Sand Dunes Tiger Beetle • Nouctid Moth • Werner and Triplehorn Flower Beetles • Wetlands • Surrounding the Dunes to the South and West are diverse wetlands. They are home to many species, in contrast to the relatively bare sand. Water from the Sand and Medano creeks soak into the ground, and travel past the dunefield, creating a oasis in the desert. As a result of the water being wicked away, dry sediments left by the creeks are free to join the dunes.(2) Building of the Great Sand Dunes • Southwesterly winds blow sediments from the San Juan mountains and San Luis Valley toward the Sangre range. Weaker Easterly winds coming from over the Sangre de Cristo’s conflict and forces the sand to drop out of the air. The airflow whips the sand deposits into true dunes. (2) Weaker Easterly Wind Conflict forms Dunes San Juan Mountains Strong Southwest winds Sangre De Cristo Mountains Sand Recycling Building of the Dunes (cont.) • The waterways circling the Dunes carry away sediment from the sand sheet. At the ends of Sand and Medano creek the sand is deposited, and the wind blows the sediment directly back at the Sand Dunes. (2) Sand carried to the end of Sand/Medano Creek Sand blown back to Dunes Sand picked up by Sand/Medano Creek Sources • (1) Steven, Thomas A., Peter W. Lipman, and Harald H. Mehnert. "Volcanic History of the San Juan Mountains, Colorado, as Indicated by Potassium–Argon Dating." Volcanic History of the San Juan Mountains, Colorado, as Indicated by Potassium–Argon Dating. The Geologic Society of America, 10 Apr. 1970. Web. 30 Nov. 2015. http://gsabulletin.gsapubs.org/content/81/8/2329 • (2) United States. National Park Service. "Geology." National Parks Service. U.S. Department of the Interior, 29 Nov. 2015. Web. 30 Nov. 2015. http://www.nps.gov/grsa/learn/nature/sanddunes.htm • (3) United States. National Park Service. "History & Culture." National Parks Service. U.S. Department of the Interior, 28 Nov. 2015. Web. 30 Nov. 2015. http://www.nps.gov/grsa/learn/historyculture/index.htm • (4) "Insects, Spiders, Centipedes, Millipedes." National Parks Service. United States, n.d. Web. 30 Nov. 2015. http://www.nps.gov/grsa/learn/nature/insects.htm • (5) Lindsey, David A. "The Geologic Story of Colorado’s Sangre De Cristo Range." The Geologic Story of Colorado’s Sangre De Cristo Range (n.d.): n. pag. United States Geologic Survey. Web. 30 Nov. 2015. http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/1349/pdf/C1349.pdf