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Shores of White Sand

White Sand Dunes and the San Andres MountainsWhen I was invited to present the group research at the Southwest Regional ACS meeting, I jumped at the opportunity, knowing that it would be an excellent opportunity to share results.  I also recognized that this would be an excellent chance to explore the extreme  southern corner of of the southwest.  The region has for good reason acquired mythic status, with unparalleled natural beauty juxtaposed with the history of atomic weapons development, and alien invasion.  What area can compete with this roster of weirdness?

The image above of gypsum dunes with the San Andres Mountains in the distance was recorded on November 6, 2009 at 12:15 MST, using the Nikon D200 converted to IR and the AF-S DX NIKKOR 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5G ED at 17mm (25mm FX equivalent).  Exposure was f/16 and 1/80s, ISO 200.  The image was recorded near the Heart of the Sands picnic area.

It’s not on the way to anywhere…  Again, perhaps for good reason.  The White Sands Missile Range (WSMR); which entirely encompasses White Sands National Monument (WSNM), is the largest military installation in the US.  WSMR is the home of the ultimate big boom, and the Trinity Site* was host to the detonation of the first weaponized nuclear device.  We should remember the date…July 16, 1945.

Picnic Shelter, White SandsThere are two large picnic areas in the Monument.  Each is abundantly populated with corrugated aluminum shelters.  There were no picnickers on this afternoon, and I really gotta wonder…  This image was recorded at 12:30 MST, using the Nikon D200IR and the AF-S DX Zoom-NIKKOR 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G IF-ED at 24mm (36mm full-frame equivalent).  Exposure was f/16 at 1/80s, with an ISO of 200.

But about the monument itself…  The ‘white sand’ is actually not sand at all, but in fact gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate).  Unlike silicon dioxide (silica) which is clearly not soluble in water, gypsum is, and thus large surface bearing gypsum deposits are exceedingly rare.  The difference is obvious the instant you get into the monument.  I’m pretty certain you can actually taste the salt in the air, and of course the  feel of the terrain is quite unlike that of sand dunes – much firmer.  The monument lies within the  Tularosa Basin, which like the Great Salt Lake, and other areas within the great basin region, has no outlet to the sea.  Thus, gypsum dissolved by rain falling from the surrounding San Andres and Sacramento Mountains becomes trapped within the basin, and the solution collects in pools that eventually deposit the crystalline form of gypsum, known as selenite.   Shores of white sand in a desert basin.

Salt Cedar DomeThe image above was recorded 13:30 MST, using the Nikon D200IR and the AF-S DX NIKKOR 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5G ED at 19mm (28mm FX equivalent).  Exposure was f/16 and 1/60s, ISO 200.  The castle-in-the-sand in the upper right of the image results from the presence of plants (Salt Cedar in this instance), which produce root structures that hold water and therefore bind gypsum.  Some of these are very large – the one in the image was about 20 ft tall.

So, is that sand/gypsum really white?  As you can see for yourself in the self-portrait of the artist, it is very white indeed!

Portrait of the Artist

Finally, a statement from the bully pulpit…  I realize that Highway 70 and WSNM are both inside of the WSMR, but I object to the presence of the US Border Patrol Station located a mile or so east of the entrance to the monument.  Inside the borders of the country, it is simply unacceptable to be asked whether I am a citizen, and having answered in the affirmative, to be asked my reason for being at a particular place, my destination,  the origin of my journey, and several other questions that are of no reasonable interest to US Border Patrol.   Does anyone really think that an inland Border Patrol Station is quite what Thomas Jefferson had in mind when he suggested that ‘The price of freedom is eternal vigilance?’  Nah, I think Benjamin Franklin stated the concern regarding internal security most clearly long ago, ‘They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.’  The voluntary compromise of our freedom is far more dangerous than any attack our enemies might conceive.  Right, I did say that it was ‘mostly’ on matters of photography…

* The precise origins of the name Trinity Site are lost to antiquity, but our best guesses reveal the complexity, and ultimately, the sadness of the main protagonist, J.R. Oppenhemier.  Much has been written about Oppenheimer and his relationship with Jean Talock, interested readers will find much to indulge their curiosity…

Macy’s Holiday Parade – PDX Style

The day after the big show, the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in NYC, there are local Macy’s-sponsored parades all across the country.  I happened to be in PDX for the 2009 Macy’s Holiday Parade.  My niece’s school band was marching (hey, she’s first saxophone!) – thus my presence – and a rare beautiful day in PDX at the end of November prompted me to record (and thus share) a few images.

Jennifer anchors the sax line

The parade began at 09:00 PDT on Friday, November 29, 2009.  The route started at the corner of NW Park and NW Davis, ran down Davis to SW Broadway, then turned south and ran down to SW Alder.  From there the route turned east and ran down Alder to SW 4th Avenue, where it then turned back north, and ran all the way up to NW Flanders, turned back west, and ended where Flanders crosses Park.

Colorful Clown

Those of you who sometimes check in on this blog will recognize that I’ve been trying to challenge myself with something other than my traditional interests.  I’m never gonna try to be a press photog, but the attempt to capture a couple of representative images was quite a lot of fun.

Clowns

And of course you get it all at this sort of event…  Marching bands, clowns, dancers, and if you’re lucky, they’ll even include the princess of the rodeo.

Camas Papermaker

Fan Dancer

Rodeo Queen

Here’s a bit I never quite got – the Holiday King and Queen.  I’m pretty certain that this set up is not in the official rule book, but was added back in the 1920’s as some sort of marketing deal.  Anyway, here’s this year’s royalty – looking, well, pretty royal…of course.

The Holiday Royalty

No Holiday Parade could be complete without an official visit from the big guy, Kris Kringle.  Okay boys and girls, it’s officially time to amend your wicked ways and be seriously good, in the hope that Kris gives credit for last minute effort – myself, I’d be preparing for that lump-of-coal Bob Dylan Christmas CD…

The Big Man

All images were recorded using the Nikon D700 and the AF-S VR Zoom-NIKKOR 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6G IF-ED.  Shutter-priority capture (+/0/1 one stop around 1/400s), ISO 3200 (mostly).

Contact

The Very Large Array

Whilst visiting Bosque del Apache, I decided to race up to the VLA for part of the day – that’s the Very Large Array for you non-geeks.  Of course the VLA is so cool that even non-geeks have heard about it, maybe on account of Carl Sagan’s novel named Contact, or as likely perhaps, from the film version.

BTW, I really like this film.  One of my favorite parts is the bit where the Tom Skerritt character (Drumlin); who plays a overbearing and unscrupulous science administrator, who tries to steal the glory of discovering a signal of extraterrestrial origin from the Jody Foster character (Arroway),  but instead get’s paid back big-time in the most ironical of ways.  Not very realistic, but damned entertaining…

Anyway, the first thing you learn when you arrive at the facility is that the US government is not spending your tax dollars using the array to search for evidence of extraterrestrial life, e.g., SETI doesn’t get to access the array.  Why the hell not, I ask!  The answer comes in the form of the second thing you learn about the array – that the design is pretty much the opposite of what you’d need to conduct a comprehensive search for radio signals indicating the presence of extraterrestrial life.  Gads.  The third thing you learn is that none of the users of the array actually spend any time there – all internet connections and so forth.  Lame, and a pity, since the San Agustin Plain is lovely.

Very Large Array

The antennas are laid out on a full gauge railroad track in a Y-shaped arrangement, and although I never saw the base position of the individual antennas change, the orientation of the dishes changes every few minutes.  Each antenna is huge by the way, each dish has a diameter of  over 80 feet, and the weight of each station is about 230 tons.

I recommend a stop if you are ever in the general vicinity – there is nothing on earth quite like this rig.

Below I include an image from space via Google Earth:

GoogleImage of the VLA