The year 2015 seems to be a year of reflection for
me. For one thing the recent knee
replacement has provided an abundance of time to think, especially about aging and
what I was doing 50 years ago. Wow, the
50 years refers to my graduation from a university, well a college back them,
and then life after that momentous event.
Right about graduation time, as students were
talking to each other about future plans, we begin to hear more (maybe we listened more closely) about Vietnam
and Southeast Asia. Most of us had only the slightest idea about the location
of Vietnam (from a world geography course), let along why US soldiers were being sent to the country. As the previous 1964 semester started in August, we
knew about the Gulf of Tonkin resolution that gave President Johnson the
authority to “punish” North Vietnam for ?attacking US Naval destroyers. The initial “punishment” was to use war
planes against the “enemy.” Then came an
increase in advisers (first sent in 1960 and now over 15,000) and by the end of
the year, nearly 200,000 combat troops.
My friends who were not going to graduate school were beginning to worry
somewhat about being drafted into the Armed Forces. But, most of us thought that the “conflict”
would be over in a few months and the world would return to “normal.” The exception to this opinion came from friends who had graduated from a ROTC university and could not wait until deployment since that duty provided the shortest route to promotion!
A common “water cooler” talk was about the draft
boards that made the final decision about individuals who were drafted. Kansas has 105 counties and each had their
own Draft Board making those decisions.
At that time when a male turned 18 years of ages, he had to head to the
county court house and register with the Draft Board (Selective Service Act of 1940) and then came home with a “draft
card” (I still have my original as I registered in June 1961) and orders to
carry it at all times. We also needed to
inform our Board of any changes in eligibility such as getting married, or having
children, or losing your arm in an auto accident. From 1961 on, I begin to make frequent trips
to the Board taking along my grades and proof of enrollment to keep my II-S (student) classification. Any little slip up and boom, a reclassification to I-A (available for military service). If that happened it was usually a bus ride to Kansas City for the infamous "medical physicals," a process most people passed (except my brothers), and then came induction, and finally a trip to Southeast Asia (mostly). It is hard to explain to non-Vietnam War age persons the anxiety associated with the draft. From about age 18-25 the lives of most males were simply put on hold. I knew kids who moved to Canada, some who got married and started having children, and others who begged and pleaded (and perhaps bribed) to get into the National Guard. I knew others who simply enlisted and took a three or four year commitment and hoped for a better placement than the two year draftees. And then sadly I had friends who came home in a box. I was one of those geeks who thoroughly enjoyed school and just wanted to continue with my education. Fortunately I remained in school until I turned age 27, two years after the normal draft cutoff age. I greatly respected those who served our country but was happy to opt out.
Even in rural western Kansas we had become more cognizant
about the plight of Blacks, especially in the South. The events at Selma with Martin Luther King
Jr. and in Los Angeles (Watts District) were beginning to pull us out of our
sheltered cocoon. However, in western Kansas
we thought that all of this trouble was far away and would never reach us. After all, most of us personally knew maybe one
or two Blacks as Western Kansas was pretty “lily white.”
Patsy Cline, 1957 photo. Mellow songstress. Public Domain. |
I was able to observe, during my four years of undergraduate
studies, a great change in popular music.
We went in with Patsy Cline, Ricky Nelson, The Highwaymen, Connie
Francis and a host of other pretty mellow singers. By graduation we had The Rolling Stones, the
Beatles, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, The Byrds, Jr. Walker and the All Stars
and a number of other bands that were far from mellow. Rock and Roll was in full swing and had gone from When I was a little baby my mama would rock me in the cradle to I can't get no satisfaction, I can't get no girl reaction.
The Rolling Stones, raucous in 1962 and still
touring in 2015. Photo Public Domain. |
This was also the age of radio station KOMA 1520 on
your dial (AM) out of Oklahoma City. It
seems that the station was able to crank up their output after dark to 50,000 watts and Rock
and Roll was beamed all over the Plains and Midwest. I ran down my car battery down more than once
listening to Charlie Tuna spinning the hits.
In late summer 1964 I and two friends took off for a
small camping trip to Colorado---we needed a break from summer working before
classes started at Labor Day. My father was not thrilled that I was leaving
work early but off we went for our epic adventure---I was driving 1956 red and white
Mercury pulling a borrowed very tiny camping trailer. One night we were in a small bar in Golden,
Colorado, having a brew (Coors I am certain) when the server asked why were not
over at the concert in Red Rocks Amphitheater where the Beatles were
playing? We confessed that money was
short and we were lucky to afford a $.25 draw.
However, we decided to drive over just to see what was going on. We then made a decision to try and climb the
rocks and sneak in to the concert. OK,
we were not the smartest kids on the block.
So off we went and ended up on some steps at the rear (back of the
stage) part of the venue. We ran into a
policeman blocking our way and I simply explained to him that we were just
three rural kids from western Kansas and could not afford tickets. He told us we were much more polite than the
screaming girls and let us pass. We
started to walk in and security yelled at us as were going to walk on to the
stage (the concert had just started) so we simply trudged up a few more steps
and squeezed into the third row and took in the concert. Yah, just a few farm boys from rural Kansas lucking
out!
One period of time after graduation in 1965 that I
specifically remember was enrolling in a geology field camp, a geologist’s
“rite of passage.” Unfortunately today, University budgets have severely
restricted many traditional camps. But
in 1965 I borrowed a few dollars and enrolled at Colorado State University. Why CSU?
I don’t really remember except that I, along with a fellow student,
could drive to the camp and it was less expensive than some since we were
camping rather than staying in a field station. The camp consisted of 10 students, one
instructor and a graduate student assistant, living in tents, and group cooking
for morning and evening meals; lunch was usually peanut butter and jelly on
bread with fruit. I can attest to the
fact that some really strange meals were prepared for the group by the “cooks”
(consisting of two students rotating through the meal preparation). In my case, no one told me, a flatlander from
Kansas, that certain food items required extra cooking length at high altitudes
(like dried beans!). In another case
someone forgot to tell two foreign exchange students that pancakes were not
deep fried breads. The other 8 students
were from CSU so they returned to Ft. Collins late Saturday and returned the
following evening with the cheapest beer they could locate. Without many resources for a motel my
colleague and I remained in camp.
We sort of lived in luxury, well not real luxury, but
I had borrowed a very large center-pole army surplus tent from a friend. The other students had University-issued
small a-side tents. We had ample room for two
cots and a table and our packs. Several
all-nighters were pulled to finish maps and reports since I procrastinated by
fishing in the evening, or sitting around the campfire spinning yarns.
We completed three major projects: 1) mapping, by
plane table and alidade, the Sloan Diatreme northwest of Fort Collins; 2)
mapping sedimentary rocks exposed around Steamboat Rock north of Ft. Collins;
and 3) mapping complex igneous and metamorphic rocks near Cameron Pass and Mt. Richthofen west of Ft. Collins.
Most geology students today are unfamiliar with the
plane table and alidade as modern mapping instruments use laser beams or
satellite information to plot points and elevations. However, the alidade was an ingenious
instrument and senior geologists like me certainly have memories (some good,
some bad) of plane tabling and we all carried around trigonometry tables in our
back pocket. The alidade consisted of a
telescopic tube with a series of cross hairs visible for reading a stadia
rod--a wooden stick with measurements every tenth of a foot. In very simple form the instrument person
knew the elevation of the plane table and was able to determine the elevation
of the stick, and the distance to the stick (held by the rod man), by reading
the angle on the calibrated alidade arc---the tube could be moved up or
down---and then using the trig tables.
It was more complex than this explanation and old-time field books are
filled with rows and columns of numbers; however, the elevations and distances
were plotted on the plane table sheets and geologic contacts and topographic
contours were drawn in by hand. So, we
spent our time at the Sloan Diatreme meticulously plotting elevations and
contacts. Life for field geologists
seems easier today!
Plane table and
alidade. The surveyor/geologist is
looking toward his partner holding a measuring stick (stadia rod). Photo from sale items on EBAY. |
The Sloan Diatreme is an igneous intrusion sort of
blown out of the Earth’s mantle similar to the diatremes in Arkansas and South
Africa. The diatremes contain minerals that
are fairly rare in rocks of the Earth’s surface---things like chrome diopside
and diamond. Today several other
diatremes or kimberlite pipes have been discovered in the area and are grouped
together as the Colorado-Wyoming State Line Diamond District. It is my understanding that over 100k
diamonds have been commercially produced from this district. Today I do not believe commercial mines are operating; however, all diatremes are under claim(I think).
In field camp one of our assignments was to complete
a working proposal for extraction of diatreme diamonds—what would it cost, how
would you do it, would there be a profit?
The assignment was prepared as a hypothetical business proposal for a
mining company. Of course at that time
diamonds had not been discovered in the District and the students (smart as we
were) laughed and giggled at the idea!
The instructor had the last laugh since in 1975 diamonds were located!
We then moved a bit further north and east of the
Sloan and begin mapping several late Paleozoic rock units near a landmark
called Steamboat Rock. The rocks are
mostly red and sit right on top of a Precambrian Granite so that much geologic
time is missing in the unconformity. Of
course, this unconformity is due what geologists term the Ancestral Rockies
Orogeny where large blocks of Precambrian rocks were “pushed up” into respectable
mountain ranges in the Pennsylvanian Period.
Generic granite is normally composed of quartz, “feldspar” and iron-rich
biotite and/or hornblende. As the rocks erode,
the quartz and feldspar break down into smaller and smaller pieces while the
iron-rich minerals begin to oxidize (rust) and impart a red to orange color to
silt and sand –size particles. Hence red
rocks on top of the granite.
The Steamboat Rock project was the first time that I
had to seriously use a Jake Stick (Jacob Staff) to measure a stratigraphic
section. I suspect using such is a lost
art today. At its simplest form a Jake Stick
was personalized as being the exact height as your eye, and with a bubble level
attached to the top. In measuring
thickness of rocks exposed in a hillside one set the staff on the ground, level
(by using the bubble), and looked over the top of the stick and picked a point
on the hillside where you eye pointed.
If your eye height was 70 inches then that point on the hill was 70
inches higher than the bottom of the staff and you moved upward and sit the
stick on the hillside point and do it all over again.
The more difficult scenario was where the beds were
dipping and not flat. You could check
the dip and recalculate measurements back in camp. But we learned to install an inclinometer or
moveable protractor below the bubble that would allow us to make certain the
Stick was perpendicular to the bedding.
You could do the same thing with a hand level or a Brunton
Compass but it was faster with a Jake Stick.
At the same time you were keeping track in a field book and describing
the rock layers. A tedious process: however,
lots of information was needed to complete maps and stratigraphic sections.
Finally the camp moved west into the high mountains
around Cameron Pass along the gravel road (now paved) from Fort Collins to Walden. The Pass separated
the Never Summer Mountains trending south while the Medicine Bow Mountains
trended north into Wyoming---we mapped in both ranges and that is where I
gained my healthy respect for summer storms with nasty lightning strikes. The final project was to map Mt. Richthofen with
its igneous intrusion and the adjacent Pierre Shale cooked by the heat of the intrusion. It was a tough job as Mt. Richthofen came in
at 12,951 feet in elevation and the cooked shale (hornfels) created a really
bad talus slope almost impossible to hike.
But we survived.
The other notable event of summer 1965 was the great
Denver flood. As students, we were mapping in the rain but also listening to a
transistor radio (all AM stations) describing the flooding in Denver. I distinctly remember the announcer saying
something like “here comes another house down the river (South Platte). Oh my God it just crashed into the bridge.”
The Denver Post (recap by Joey Bunch, Denver Post,
2005) described the situation as: With twisters in the foothills and a blizzard
of hail, the great flood of 1965 announced its arrival with Old Testament fury.
After
lunchtime on June 16 [1965] the coal-black sky delivered a rainstorm so furious
that people in Douglas County said they labored to breathe.
A
rancher put a washtub in his yard to measure the rain, and it quickly
overflowed. The National Weather Service recorded 14 inches - a year's worth of
rain for the region - in a little more than three hours near Larkspur.
The
storm drove a 20-foot wall of water from Douglas County to downtown Denver that
evening, taking at least 21 lives, devastating 15 counties and leaving
mountains of mud and $540 million in damage - $3.2 billion in [2005] dollars.
In comparison, news agencies such as CNN and
Business Week reported that losses in the recent Colorado floods of 2013 will
exceed $2 billion.
Despite the rain and destruction in Colorado, I
received a passing grade in field camp, returned to Kansas to work and play “townteam”
baseball, and in the fall headed to South Dakota for graduate work. Life is good at age 22 and after tromping all
over those mountains I was in the best physical shape of my life!
As the years passed by, the stories and remembrances
about field camp seemed to take on a life of their own---not only my experiences
but those of other geologists at other camps.
I now remember sleeping on pine boughs, cooking with buffalo dung, and
chawing down on bear jerky, mountain lion roasts, and drinking unfiltered water---with
wild plums thrown in for dessert! But it
was a rite of passage into the adult world of geology and I would not have
missed it for anything.