from a sandstone slab as the sun sets.
Striped whipsnake (Masticophis taeniatus).
from a sandstone slab as the sun sets.
Striped whipsnake (Masticophis taeniatus).
on Parriott Mesa for the first eight months of the year advises a new sign at the trailhead to the mesa top. How ironic that one shows up off season?!
above Adobe Mesa this evening, this year’s first supermoon, appearing slightly larger and brighter than usual.
is dusted with the first snow of the season on a stormy afternoon. A violent 6.9 magnitude earthquake occurred in the Lost River Range on 28 October 2983 and created a 21 mile (34 km) long fault scarp at the foot of the mountain front.
Borah Peak (12,662 ft (3,859 m)). Note the prominent fault scarps at the foot of the lowermost slopes created during the 1983 earthquake.
US Forest Service interpretive site along a fault segment created during the 1983 event. Borah Peak is at the center skyline.
stoked my early interest in geology and, next to my parents, Ellis Underkoffler is clearly the most pivotal person in my early formative life. Here we are, now years later, at a regional meeting of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers, Ellis having invited me to deliver the keynote address at the conference highlighting my adventurous cave research in Central America. It was a fun reunion. Inspiring teachers are important!
by a young buck in the back yard.
Mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus).
are better to see you with.
Unidentified dragonfly.
first appears in the rock record about the time of the dinosaurs - Early Jurassic (201.3 - 174.7 Ma) - and it persists on the landscape today and is known by a variety of common names.
Horsetail (genus Equisetum).
of me fracturing my femur and requiring a hip replacement passes with hardly a notice, other than it being memorialized on my calendar on this date. Since then I’ve biked more than two-thirds of the circumference of the Earth, so it seems to be working well.
according to this ancient and rusty 3M Company sign along a state highway in eastern Washington. Indeed.
for me with two failed launch attempts due to a bad batch of Aerotech G80-7T rocket motors. One exploded in the rocket, failing to properly ignite the propellant and ejection charge, though there was no damage to the rocket body due to its robust fiberglass and epoxy construction.
Cherokee and me, prior to launch at the sod farm on a hot and hazy day.
Three…two…one…chuff! The Wildman Cherokee on rail C6 at moment of ignition failure which pressurized the rocket body and popped off the nose cone.
Cracked engine casing showing one of the two unignited propellant grains. The yellow forward closure contains unignited black powder of the ejection charge. Both failed motors are stamped with the same date/batch number.
is about 27 degrees to the horizontal as demonstrated by these piles of grain outside an elevator. This critical threshold describes the maximum stable slope that a dry, loose granular material can assume and is primarily a function of the grain size of the material involved. This concept is employed by geologists when assessing the stability of natural slopes.
Grain elevator near Ritzville, Washington. It’s been quite a good yield despite the dry conditions this year in the Columbia Basin.
dimple the eastern Washington landscape, so-called Mima mounds, where geologists have proposed multiple hypotheses in order to explain their puzzling origin. They seem to be relic features not being formed today, so I favor the periglacial origin, similar to the mechanism that creates patterned ground in Arctic regions.
Wide view of Mima mounds in Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge. Click on image to embiggen.
The low areas between the mounds often contain vernal pools of shallow water in late winter and early spring. Click on image to enlarginate.
has begun and these are my finished projectiles to fly during the four-day long event over Labor Day weekend near the Tri-Cities in eastern Washington. Aiming higher!
The wound fiberglass Wildman Journey (left) and Wildman Cherokee (right) are lofted on 38 mm and 29 mm engines, respectively.
for a fishing Osprey on a ponderosa pine snag, observed today attempting to grab breakfast from a wetland pond, though unsuccessfully.
Osprey (Pandion haliaetus).
bedrock occur along the Fish Lake trail, the result of an advancing lava flow into a standing forest during the Miocene Epoch. Imagine the snap, crackle, pop and hiss as the trees were overrun by the molten lava. Geology is everywhere, you just have to look!
Old railroad cut exposing a tree mold in the Wanapum Basalt, Priest Rapids Member (15.97-11.63Ma).
Base of another tree mold showing the flaring of the root collar in contact with the underlying paleosol. Note the silicified wood fragments that still exhibit cellular structure.
working a wetland pond for breakfast as a united flotilla, seemingly surrounded by glistening diamonds due to strong backlighting by the Sun. Between these and the Osprey, the fish that occupy these pools don’t stand a chance.
American White Pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos).
together this afternoon, caught at the moment when Mama Osprey takes off - seen below - and Junior launches shortly thereafter with little fanfare. Godspeed, Junior!
Osprey (Pandion haliaetus).
for a hiding, but somewhat curious, badger.
American badger (Taxidea taxus).
by Mama Osprey, yet again, this evening. She’s going to have to starve this capable fledgling in order to get this nest potato to launch.
Osprey (Pandion haliaetus).