Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Spring on the Billy Goat Trail

Ladies and gentlemen, spring has arrived in the Washington, DC region. It is sublime. I'm very grateful that it's my spring break this week because even though I still have a ton of work to do, I've had the opportunity to get outside every day and enjoy a bit of the weather.

This weekend, I got up early both days and headed out the the Billy Goat Trail, a rugged hiking trail along the Potomac River's gorge about 12 miles upstream from DC. I departed from the trail itself both days, which was great because it brought me to places I hadn't seen before. I found a lot of cool new structures and rocks! Over the next few days or weeks, I'll be sharing some of those images with you, but for today, I figured I'd show you some 'soft' imagery, just to celebrate the fun of being outside on a hike on a lovely day. ...and wearing short sleeves, no less!

Here's a shot of typical scenery along the Billy Goat Trail. This is looking upstream:

upstream

One of my side-trips off the trail... because the water level was pretty low, I was able to get to some islands that are often inaccessible. This is the channel between the Rocky Islands (downstream of Great Falls, upstream of Mather Gorge):

rocky_islands

This land is all part of the C&O Canal National Historical Park. Here's a spot where rains from Tropical Storm Hanna breached the wall of the C&O Canal, allowing its water to drain downward into the Potomac. Because the canal's towpath was located there, the Park Service has constructed a temporary path which detours around the breach:

IMG_0333

I saw some good birds on my hikes there. Red-tailed hawks, double-crested cormorants, Canada geese, mallards, belted kingfishers, pileated woodpeckers, red-bellied woodpeckers, tufted titmice, chickadees, robins, blue jays, and great blue herons. Also, both local species of vultures: the turkey vulture and the black vulture. This is a black vulture (note the black, not red, head):

black vulture

Here's some tracks: theropod dinosaurs? ...or great blue heron? You be the judge:

theropod tracks

Here's a cool fish skull I found:

fish_skull

Of course, it wasn't all scenery, birds, and fish. There were rocks, too. I took a lot of rock photos, and you'll get to see them all in due course... But for now, let me start you off with the tame stuff. Here's some cobbles I encountered along the hike...

Cobble of the Seneca Sandstone (Triassic arkose) showing a mudchip rip-up clast:

IMG_0301

Tilting it a bit, you can see other mudchips too:

IMG_0302

Cobble of cement containing Seneca chunks:

IMG_0297

Cobbles of quartzite of the Antietam Formation showing Skolithos 'worm' tube trace fossils:

IMG_0299

I love these Skolithos tubes. It's hard not to love them, and they're everywhere around here. Like the Seneca cobbles, they come from source areas to the west (Culpeper Basin & Blue Ridge, respectively), and were transported to the Maryland Piedmont by the ancestral Potomac River.

IMG_0294

My favorite Skolithos-bearing quartzite cobble:

IMG_0295

...And the same cobble, end-on:

IMG_0296

More to come, tomorrow...

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home