GC2FHGG Earthcache Devil's Stairsteps
Type: Earth | Size: Other Other | Difficulty: 1 out of 5 | Terrain: 1 out of 5
By: jp66 @ | Hide Date: 06/02/2010 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N37° 25.883 W105° 02.644 | Last updated: 08/30/2019 | Fav points: 0
Takes less than an hour  Parking available 

Devil's Stairsteps

The radial dikes of the Spanish Peaks area are very famous. I remember seeing them in my Geology 101 textbook. They are one of the best examples of their type in the world.

What are the radial dikes of the Spanish Peaks? I'm glad you asked.

Long ago, this area was buried under hundreds of meters of other rocks. During a period of volcanic activity, magma rose up under the area now occupied by the Spanish Peaks. The area domed up above the magma. Fractures formed in the rocks as a result of the stress. These fractures were filled with various kinds of magma, which slowly cooled and solidified.

The igneous rocks that fill the vertical cracks and joints are called dikes. Those that form horizontal layers are called sills. The smallish intrusions that form the cores of the Spanish Peaks are called stocks. The igneous rocks that make up the nearby buttes -- Gardner, Goemmer, and Huerfano -- are called volcanic plugs.

Over millions of years, the softer overlying rocks eroded away. The dikes are now visible since they do not erode as quickly as the surrounding rock. They form walls of igneous rocks that dramatically criss-cross the landscape.

One set of dikes radiates outward from the West Spanish Peak. Another set radiates from Silver Mountain. The third set, which is the oldest, are roughly parallel instead of radiating. They mostly trend east-west.

This earthcache will take you to one of the sets of dikes that emanate from the West Spanish Peak.

The dikes known as the Devil's Stairsteps are well-displayed where they cross Highway 12. There is an informative interpretive sign at the site.

Interestingly, many of the ridges crossing Highway 12 here are not actually dikes. They are hardened parts of the sedimentary Cuchara Formation. The dikes themselves are formed of granodiorite porphyries, lamprophyres, and the like, which in this spot are fairly crumbly. It is estimated that they were emplaced at a very high temperature (1000-1100 C). The heat baked the surrounding sandstone, hardening it and subtly changing its texture and mineralogy. This is called contact metamorphism. This zone is more resistant to weathering than the dike or the surrounding unmetamorphosed sandstone.

Park at the pull-out. Read the sign and look across the road at the rocks.

To log this cache, please send the following in an e-mail. Also, please post a photo of yourself and/or your GPS with the dikes in the background.

1. According to the sign, how long ago were the dikes emplaced?

2. According to the sign, how much material has eroded away?

Optional:

3. How many ridges can you count? Can you see the difference between the hardened sandstone and the crumbly and/or crystal-rich dikes?

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 Logs

11 Logs: Found it 11  

Found it 06/18/2019 By TiffinTravelers
Thanks for the lesson. Out geocaching across the country. Beautiful place

Found it 06/10/2019 By Jonas and Julia
We stopped by to look for this cache while road tripping from Chaska, Minnesota. Interesting geology—we had never heard of this phenomenon. An email with our answers is on its way. Thanks!

Found it 06/07/2019 By Stephenjha
Second day of caching road trip to Colorado with KCCG. Spending the day covering the miles and collecting counties and interesting caches. Today is day 2632 of my daily streak. Thank you for placing this cache.

Found it 06/07/2019 By KCCG
Beautiful morning to see these impressive rocks! Stephenjha sending answers.

Kicking off the summer with a great American road trip to celebrate M4ISU’s belated birthday!  After months of planning, I am finally on the road with Stephenjha as my copilot.  I am logging as we go which makes it easier to keep track of the HUGE playlist we are hoping to accomplish.  If all goes well, I’ll drive 2500+ miles, add 50+ new counties, see 5 different states, find some cool cemeteries, increase my Fizzy and Jasmer progress, find 20+ virtuals, a handful of Earthcaches, a Wherigo, and maybe a webcam or 2!  It’s going to be a crazy weekend!  

TFTC. SL. Thanks for placing this hide for my enjoyment, I really appreciate your effort! CACHE ON!!!

Found it 05/31/2019 By kteeeee
Great times had with sweet-marie, MissPeach13 & Laphamclan (CCCs) on our roadtrip into Colorado! Answers sent. Thanks for the Earthcache.

Found it 09/06/2018 By Firemnky
On a Fall trip through Colorado doing some caching and seeing the sites. A beautiful scenic drive through Rocky Mountain National Park. Visiting the downtown areas of Boulder, Denver, Castle Rock and Colorado Springs to name a few. We enjoyed a beautiful hike on the Barr trail at the Summit of Pikes Peak. It was a wonderful trip with quite a bit of caching thrown in along the way. We are now turning toward home and some county caching along the way. Thanks for bringing us to this one. This is a very interesting spot. Answers emailed.

Found it 08/22/2018 By Leapin' Lee
Found on our way up to North Lake this morning to fish. I’ve always enjoyed earth caches. Thanks so much for your contribution to geocaching.

Found it 08/20/2018 By memnosine
TFTC. On our way to Creede for a couple of plays. Spent the day/evening in La Veta, a must to visit this cache. Took all my little friend TBs along.
Email has been sent. Our B&B host recommended Aly's for dinner, and I second the thought! A marvelous dinner, a great wine list, and pretty inexpensive. Through a bit of luck the local theater group was performing "Church Basement Ladies" the same night, so we had theater nearby as well as dining!
Thanks for the cache.

Found it 08/13/2018 By spooky_luke
What an amazing piece of geology and a super EarthCache to showcase it! We had a great time looking up at these rocks and CornishCandy has sent the answers on behalf of us both. Many thanks for setting this EarthCache.

Found it 08/13/2018 By CornishCandy
Stopped off with spooky_luke as we head towards GC19. We have loved admiring the vast landscape on our route and it was great to stop off at this EarthCache to learn more about it. I have sent the answers on behalf of us both. We could also see from hear some of area affected by the wildfires. Thanks for the EarthCache.

Found it 08/08/2018 By MsYB
Traveling with YsnkaBucs and headed to GC19 and picking up a few ECs on the way and found this one. Love these mountain ECs as we don’t see anything like this in Florida. Thanks for the EC and bringing us here!