GC2QQGY Earthcache The Amazing Balanced Rock
Type: Earth | Size: Other Other | Difficulty: 1.5 out of 5 | Terrain: 2 out of 5
By: Tank and Spaz @ | Hide Date: 05/01/2011 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N38° 51.885 W104° 53.842 | Last updated: 08/30/2019 | Fav points: 0

In order to complete this cache, you must visit Garden of the Gods. No armchair Earthcaching is allowed. Please go to the site, to learn and answer the questions. There are three informational signs in the area that can assist you in answering the questions.

A special thank you to Bret Tennis at Garden of the Gods Park for his assistance in creating, reviewing, and authenticating the educational information of the cache.



The story of the rocks seen in the Garden of the Gods Park begins over 300 million years ago when a different set of Rocky Mountains existed here. This first set of Rocky Mountains is known as the Ancestral Rockies, which were composed of the same granite (igneous rock type) that Pikes Peak is made of today. Pikes Peak granite has been dated at 1.6 billion years in age using geologic radiometric dating methods. This means that the granite that composed previous mountains, and our current Pikes Peak, formed during the Pre-Cambrian age as a large batholith, known as the Pikes Peak Massive. This batholith of granite gets pushed up (uplifted) during mountain building episodes, called orogenies, which are caused by forces of plate tectonics. There have been 3 mountain building periods in the Pikes Peak area:

1. The Ancestral Rockies occurred approximately 300 million years ago. The erosion of these first Rocky Mountains formed the sedimentary Fountain Formation conglomerate layers, and the Lyons sandstones.

2. The Laramide Orogeny occurred approximately 70 – 80 million years ago. This phenomenon was caused by plate tectonics. The Pacific Plate dove under the North American Plate, causing the continent to buckle, and uplifted the Front Range, giving us a second set of Rocky Mountains. These also eroded away.

3. Pikes Peak was uplifted during a third mountain building time approximately 10 million years ago. It is currently being eroded by many factors, particularly ice. The bowls on Pikes Peak were scoured out by glaciers during the last Ice Age that ended 10,000 years ago.

The Garden of the Gods Park is composed entirely of sedimentary rock layers, and is unique because the rock layers have been tilted upright and exposed in dramatic fashion. Each ridge and valley represents a different period of environment from the past 65 to 300 million years of Earth’s history. Erosion has sculpted these rocks into fascinating shapes.

Around 300 Million years ago, the Ancestral Rockies once stood here. Over time, the forces of wind and water eroded the magnificent peaks into swift streams full of sediments. Them sediments were eventually pressed and cemented into solid rock. The new rocks took the form of:

1) sands full of iron oxide creating red sandstone rock,
2) muds forming softer, more delicate shales, and
3) a mixture of sand and pebbles called conglomerate.

Balanced rock was exposed more than 60 million years ago when the existing Rocky Mountains rose. To make its current shape, the soft bottom layer of shale eroded much faster than the harder sandstone and conglomerate above. Amazingly, the narrow pedestal supporting Balanced Rock has held the 700-ton weight for thousands of years.


To get credit for this find, answer the following questions:

1. Identify, of the three primary types, what type of rock that Balanced Rock is.

2. Due to the uniqueness of this feature, estimate its height, widths, and circumference.

3. Since this is very abundant ecosystem for animals, what type of trees are found here?

4. Identify at least three animals that come here to gather food.

5. Who started photographing the rock for tourists and how much did it cost?

6. Optional: Please post a picture of yourself/team at the site with your GPS.

Answers with "I dont know; Cant find it; etc..," or failing to answer the first four questions will cause your log to be deleted.

Each person who logs a find must submit their own answers, no group emails.

Please be mindful to remain on all paved and hard surfaces.

Do not go off-roading or damage the natural habitat in any way.

This is a learning opportunity, that many will want to join in on, so CITO and leave no trace when visiting.

I do not reply to correct answers. So please log your find once you have completed the cache and submitted your answers. If there are any concerns, I will contact you.

ALL LOGS THAT DO NOT HAVE ANSWERS SUBMITTED WITH 72 HOURS WILL BE DELETED.



For additional information try these books:
Roadside Guide to Colorado, John Chronic
Prairie, Peak and Plateau, John and Halka Chronic
Geology of the Pikes Peak Region, Colorado, Richard Hubbard and Danny Wyatt
Introduction to the Geology of the Colorado Springs Region, Jeffrey B. Noblett
Garden of God’s, Paul Nesbit
Prehistoric Journey: A History of Life on Earth, Johnson& Stucky

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 Hints

Garden of the Gods Visitor & Nature Center is open from 9 am to 5 pm in the winter months and 8 am to 8 pm Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend. Both the Park and Visitor & Nature Center are free and open to the public.

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Driving Directions

 Logs

15 Logs: Found it 14  Write note 1  

Found it 07/02/2019 By scheblo25
Drove all around the garden today. This was our last stop and pretty busy but pretty cool. 100+ years of stopping to get your photo here! Haha. Thanks for creating this earthcache

Write note 07/02/2019 By samlasky
Rainy!

Found it 07/02/2019 By samlasky
Rainy!

Found it 06/29/2019 By Free52grobert
GrammiesGeoFun and Grobert on our trek across America working on our list of contiguous counties. We are enjoying the ride through an area we lived near 25 years ago. Wonderful location for a hide. We appreciate the thought and effort that goes into creating these hides. Thank you for giving the rest of us a challenge. Practicing CITO.

Found it 06/27/2019 By kristen016
Just awesome! Will send answers!

Found it 09/16/2018 By shipwreck77
Is truly an amazing rock and deserving of a favorite point for me!

Found it 09/13/2018 By cachestacker
Got up early the next morning after the NEEDTOBREATHE concert at Red Rocks and made our way to Pike's Peak. Skipped Manitou Springs due to heavy traffic for festival or something and went straight to Garden of the Gods. I'd been here before, a long time ago, but did not have technology that would have let me do any of the ECs here at the time. This time, though! Answers sent. +1 Fave.

Cachestacker - Houston, TX Overall find #17834

Found it 09/10/2018 By jimtkirk
Enjoyed this area immensely. Sent email with answers. TFTC

Found it 09/08/2018 By natep26
We had a great time exploring the park after Pikes Peak summit got shut down due to a storm. Headed back to Corpus Christi after a trip to RMNP. Tftc!

Found it 09/08/2018 By LaFavorite Cacher
Such a fun location to visit!! Thank you for the smiley and the new knowledge. [2929]

Found it 08/21/2018 By cedricdubree
Thank you for this beautiful cache!

Found it 08/19/2018 By Dr_Teeth
Great Cache. Thank you!

Found it 08/18/2018 By DRZMAN
TFTC Sent answers.

Found it 08/18/2018 By Firework99
Playing catch up on my vist to Colorado.

Found it 08/14/2018 By greg527
#1214 I have sent the answers and I have a picture below. I did this as I was leaving Garden of the Gods. This is also part of my cross country road trip that I started on July 23rd.