DEATH_120709_417
Existing comment: Zabriskie Point
The otherworldly badlands around hou are deathly silent and still. Yet this arid scene is the result of often violent action of water and earthquakes. Three to five million years ago -- before the deepest part of Death Valley had formed -- shimmering lakes filled a long, mountain-rimmed valley here. Fine silt and volcanic ash washed into the lake, settling to the bottom, ultimately creating the thick deposit of clay, sandstone and siltstone that make up the Furnace Creek Formation. These once-level layers are being tilted by seismic activity and pressure that is folding the ancient valley's floor. As the layers uplifted and were exposed, periodic rainstorms cause powerful gullywashers that erode the soft rocks into the chaotic yet strangely beautiful landscape we see today.
Volcanic activity also influenced this landscape. The black layer across the wash is lava that oozed out onto the ancient lakebed. Hot water followed the lava, bringing minerals such as borax, gypsum, and calcite with it. Hot water also altered the mineral makeup of the Artist's Drive Formation, hydrothermally altering the rock into the psychedelic swirl of colors on the hills beyond.
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