GC46BA2 Earthcache This Pass's name means "Mouse"
Type: Earth | Size: Not chosen Not chosen | Difficulty: 2 out of 5 | Terrain: 1 out of 5
By: Dame Deco @ | Hide Date: 02/20/2013 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N37° 00.456 W104° 28.783 | Last updated: 08/30/2019 | Fav points: 0
Scenic view  Wheelchair accessible  Parking available 

This is not a typical Geocache. There is no container to find and no physical log to sign at the coordinates. Instead you will be able to enjoy and learn about an important geological feature of Colorado. It is located at a scenic overlook off I-25, northbound.

A pass is the lowest point between two mountains and provides the easiest passage for people wishing to make their way through a mountain range. Look at the vista before you to the west and north--you will see a series of mesas. Mesas are flat-topped mountains with steep sides. The top of the mesas here are composed of basalt--cooled lava flows left behind by volcanic activity a million years ago. The sedimentary rocks beneath the basalt are much softer and erode more quickly than the capstone above.

The area began as a plateau—a high, large, flat tableland. In areas with adequate rainfall, plateaus remain stable, covered by thick forests or grassy plains. But in an arid environment, mesas form. Because there is little ground cover, when rain does fall, it has the chance to flow along any cracks in the earth almost unimpeded and erode away rock before evaporating. Snow fills the cracks in the winter, expanding when it freezes, which further breaks down the rocks. The cracks widen and over the course of a million years, mesas are left behind with much open area between them. The strongest areas of the basalt capstone protect an area of rock directly beneath them, but even there rock slowly crumbles along the outside walls so that over time, the mesas themselves will disappear.

One often envisions a pass as a pathway between jagged peaks, but Raton Pass is a pathway through flat-topped mountains instead.

Passes are also notable for the way they shape human societies. Just as the Cumberland Gap provided 18th-century settlers with access to the Ohio Valley, Raton Pass provided access to the Great Plains for people from Sante Fe and other points south. Passes bring people together along a common path through treacherous terrain.

In order to log this EarthCache, email me the answers to the following questions (please don't post the answers other than the optional picture in your online log):

*** If the overlook is closed, just answer the other two questions by observing the area as you drive by ***

1. The mesas have sloping bases—how do you think those bases were formed, how did they come to be?

2. Look around and describe the ground cover. How does it contribute to the formation of mesas?

3. The signs before you provide the history of the flow of people over Raton Pass—name one group who used the pass and one fact about them that surprised you based on the information provided.

4. The last is purely optional: post a picture of yourself and/or your GPS with Fisher's Peak in the background.

As per EarthCache rules, I must delete your log if I don't receive your email within 5 days of your visit. Thanks for visiting my EarthCache!


***** Congratulations to sandean on FTF!!! *****

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 Hints

If the overlook is closed, just observe the area and answer the other two questions as you drive by.

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Driving Directions

 Logs

12 Logs: Found it 11  Write note 1  

Found it 07/01/2019 By PurplePeople
Some history here that we didn’t know. Also a good rest for our brakes! Answer sent. #8722

Found it 06/21/2019 By cardon
We love history so it was fun to learn more about Raton Pass and its significance in history.

Write note 06/17/2019 By TwoPonds
Gorgeous overlook. Great time to switch drivers.

Found it 06/17/2019 By TwoPonds
Gorgeous overlook. Great time to switch drivers.

Found it 06/16/2019 By irid3sc3nt
Greetings from Denver, CO! We were vacationing in Taos and took the canyon route east to get the EC by Cimarron then hit north to grab this one. We've actually traveled here several times on our way to Santa Fe, but I wasn't geocaching during that time so we never stopped. I'm glad I did! I enjoyed the information about the pass and the mesas.
Thanks for the EC!

Found it 05/28/2019 By dustyriver
A good find with BriGuy as we head home to Denver. Travel to central Kansas, then south thru Oklahoma, then to Geowoodstock. This day we are traveling back home after staying the night in Amarillo Great week of road trip caching.Best Wishes, DustyRiver / Terry - (Playing catch up on logging after trip - LOL) << Answers sent bu BriGuy >>

Found it 09/03/2018 By Grasshoppers&Ant
We have passed by here a few times since this one was created without stopping. Despite a moderate rain we did today. Good info on these signs here, and a good view of the area. Grandpa likes to think that the guy who hired Utes to improve a the road for 27 miles and charge tolls, “Uncle Dick” Wootton, was the reason for the name. He wonders that people didn't like paying a toll and referred to him as a "rat". Of course there's another Spanish word for rat but it doesn't mean people didn't use it here. Of course online supporting sources for this theory are lacking. Thanks for setting one up here in this beautiful area!

Found it 08/12/2018 By txbray
Stopped to enjoy he view, learn a little bit, and get a cache (of course). Love the area!
Answers on the way.
TFTC N2999

Found it 07/30/2018 By starsharon + Hubbie
Visited the pretty area today.

Found it 07/15/2018 By markens
An interesting stop. Loved the view! Answers sent via email, thanks.

Found it 07/10/2018 By chsmathwisch
Wandering around for a few days to pick up some new counties and states and finish some challenges and grab some oldies.

A great diversion on the road...thanks!

Found it 07/08/2018 By TxHydro
Day 3 of our 16 day road trip from Austin to Glacier NP and back. Today we cached our way through Colorado on our way to Wyoming. TFTC!