The geology in the 11,000' White Pines is as complex and puzzling as anywhere in the West. It was extremely challenging to map and interpret the rocks here, but it is an experience I'll never forget.
Above: a low-angle normal fault separates horizontal beds of limestone (upper part of photo) from contorted limestone beds (lower part of photo).
Above: round melon-shaped blobs indicate the presence of an ancient algal reef.
In addition to the geology, other curious things I came across include wild horses, reptiles (including several rattle snakes), a bus that served as a miner's cabin, 1000-year-old bristlecone pine trees, and a clever rain collection system on White Pine Peak that, in retrospect, may provide irrigation for a marijuana farm?
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