GC1GJ7K Earthcache Garden of the Gods - The Three Graces
Type: Earth | Size: Other Other | Difficulty: 2.5 out of 5 | Terrain: 2 out of 5
By: Me & Bucky @ | Hide Date: 09/23/2008 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N38° 52.559 W104° 52.875 | Last updated: 06/19/2022 | Fav points: 0

This EarthCache is found in Garden of the Gods Park, a Colorado Springs City Park. Park hours are as follows: May 1 – October 31, 5 am – 11 pm; November 1 – April 30, 5 am – 9 pm. There is no charge for entry into the park. Please bring a ruler or tape measure as you will be measuring the particle sizes making up the Fountain Arkose.

The Three Graces is a rock formation made up of Fountain Arkose, the oldest type of rock found in the Garden of the Gods. Fountain Arkose is a conglomerate made up of coarse-grained sediments. About 300 million years ago, the Ancestral Rocky Mountains were eroding and the sediments were being deposited as stream gravels and alluvial fan deposits. The Ancestral Rocky Mountains were formed from granite, like much of today’s Rocky Mountains, and this is where the feldspar in the Fountain Arkose came from (an “arkose” is a rock formed from at least 25% feldspar). The presence of the feldspar is what gives the Three Graces its pink hue.

Rocks formed from alluvial fan deposits often have a large difference in the particle size due to the nature of this type of deposition. Alluvial fans are formed from material which is carried in streams which travel through restricted areas such as canyons or narrow washes. When the water reaches the end of the restriction, the water spreads out and the energy of the water is dissipated. With the reduction of energy in the water, the material which was carried along drops out, with the larger material dropping first. Weather events have a large effect on the erosion of this material. Storms and spring snowmelt often cause larger particle sizes to be moved in the streams (boulders and gravels) versus smaller material (gravels, sands, and mud) which is moved during dry seasons. Catastrophic events, such as extreme floods (the Big Thompson Canyon Flood in 1976) or dam breaks and resultant flooding (the Lawn Lake Dam failure in 1982) are known to have moved boulders 20’ or more in diameter, along with a range of other smaller material.

Look closely at the particle sizes and layering which you see in the Three Graces. To log this EarthCache, send me an email with the following: 1.) Measure the largest and smallest particles you can find. 2.) Measure the width of one of the distinct layers found in this formation.


Please consider posting photos of yourself, or the local geology, when you log this EarthCache. Photos can be an additional rewarding part of your journey, but posting them is not a requirement for logging this EarthCache, and is strictly optional.


The above information was compiled from the following sources:

Colorado Springs City Webpage: Garden of the Gods Park. http://www.springsgov.com/page.asp?navID=987

Colorado Springs City Webpage: Important Events in Garden of the Gods Geology. http://www.springsgov.com/Page.asp?NavID=993


2007. Chronic H., and F. Williams. Roadside Geology of Colorado, 2nd Ed.

2004. Hopkins, R.L., and L.B. Hopkins. Hiking Colorado’s Geology


Thanks to the City of Colorado Springs and the Parks, Recreation & Cultural Services Department for allowing placement of this EarthCache!
 Custom URLs

Add cache to watch list
Log your visit
Picture Gallery

 Nearby Caches

GC1GJ7E Garden of the Gods - Sentinel Rock (0.25 kms N)
GCAEHE3 Kamala Khan another MMCU cache (7.05 kms SE)
GCAD8QX Happy Fall, Y'all! - Meet-N-Greet (13.30 kms SE)
GC34P52 Wolfpack Puzzle #5 - Geocaching Jidoku (13.89 kms NE)
GC5DHR3 Hidden Playgrounds - Cumbre Vista Park (16.67 kms NE)

   


Driving Directions

 Logs

5 Logs: Found it 5  

Found it 07/03/2019 By OliversOuting
Visiting from Delaware and enjoying this beautiful park. tftc!

Found it 06/29/2019 By Paperballpark
#4749. This was the last cache I did up here at the Garden of the Gods. There were a lot of people around this particular area today, but I was able to get the answers pretty easily. TFTC!

Found it 06/28/2019 By kristen016
At 104 degrees today it was too hot to wander too much today, but I decided to take short hike. Go figure, I ended up by a cache! Will send answers as soon as I have better internet!

Found it 06/23/2019 By Folboter JAF
Took a two-and-a-half-week trip with my son (Folboter WBF) who had just graduated from high school. We went from Ohio through Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Calilfornia, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and back to Ohio. We visited lots of great spots like Carlsbad Caverns, San Diego, LA, Sequoia National Park, Yosemite, and Pike's Peak. What a fantastic trip full of great memories!

And of course we did some geocaching along the way! We found caches in 82 new counties for us. We found five state's oldest caches (Tennessee, Texas, California, Nevada, and Colorado). We also visited seven webcams and found 22 virtuals, 19 earthcaches, various challenge caches, a few gadget caches, and lots of traditionals ... almost 200 total caches for the trip! Thanks to the cache owners for putting these great caches out there for us to enjoy on our trip!

Thanks for putting this earthcache together. Answers have been sent to the cache owner.

Found it 06/19/2019 By Saint Aubie
This was my favorite formation in the park. It's awesome that you can get up close and personal, and the formation itself is unique and amazing. Made the measurement estimates as best I could and emailed CO. Thanks for this earth cache!