El Norte Days 2 and 3: Ross Lake, Whidbey Island

More teaser photos for ye. I’d say clever things about them, but I still haven’t recovered. The people who claimed exercise gives you energy lied.

We drove up into the Cascades and hiked Ross Lake. Yes, the hike that’s all uphill on the way back. But it’s worth it, hot and dusty and exhausting as it is, because there are fascinating rocks the entire way, not to mention amazing views of various Cascade peaks. There’s even marble down by the lake! Granted, to get a good look, you have to jump into glacial meltwater, but I’ll do nearly an damn fool thing for interesting rocks.

I don’t have any pictures of my damn fool self in the lake, because my intrepid companion was too worried about me freezing bits of my anatomy off to take any, but I have got a picture of my foot on some native marble:



The following is one of the cliffs close to the boat landing. Not quite sure what it is yet – it had some unusual features we’ll discuss when I get my photos sorted.



After the lakes, we came down the mountains and visited a limestone quarry. Really, really super-neat folding in some of the strata there.



That teensy-tiny figure down at the bottom is moi. These cliffs were quite high. Here’s a crop:



How fun is that?  Just wish I hadn’t forgotten the rock hammer in the car, because this would’ve been the perfect place to let loose. Ah, well, there’s always next time. Supposed to be fossils in them thar limestones, y’know, but by the time we got there it was late and we were too exhausted to look much.

We got a late start next morning. So did the sun. And the tide. We headed back to Rosario for some fun with tide pools (wait till you see the teeny tiny hermit crabs! And the starfish nomming! And – well, it will come in time). Then we took off down to Whidbey Island, where the tide was far enough out at Blower’s Bluff still that I could get some very nice shots of glacial deposits. And speaking of glacial, check this:



That, my friends, is a damned enormous glacial erratic at Coupeville. So big, in fact, you can see it from space. My intrepid companion sent me this image he took from Google:



It is that big green blob nestled beside the apartment buildings, which it is nearly as big as. If you’re ever on Whidbey Island, go see it. You can grab an excellent cup of coffee and sit on a bench out back enjoying the glacial erratic view.

I’ve got so much to show you all – including a magnificent shrimp, annoyed herons, and some of the best geology I’ve seen in a long while. Just let me get my breath back, and we’ll dive in.

El Norte Days 2 and 3: Ross Lake, Whidbey Island
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River Walking Parte the Fourth: Rubbernecking at a Continental Trainwreck

The word of the day, my darlings, is granite. The Skykomish River seems to be inordinately fond of granite. It’s hauled down enormous chunks of it, probably plucking them from the Index Batholith, and scattered them all over its banks after a desultory bit of rounding. Walk its Cascade banks, and you’re in a gray area. It’s gray because it’s granite.



Well, granitic, anyway. Grandiorite, most likely. Maybe some tonalite, too. Look, they’re granitic, and they’re from plutons and batholiths, and that’s what really matters.

They are large. The river isn’t messing about, here: it’s swift and strong and likes boulders. It also likes variety. Scattered amidst the granitic rocks are boulders and chunks of some truly delightful stuff. And what it’s all got to say is this: you are rubbernecking at a continental trainwreck. An island continent collided with the North American continent about fifty million years ago, and the lives of these rocks changed dramatically.

Slow down, take a long look at the beautiful carnage – this is one time when you don’t have to feel guilty for gawking at an accident scene.



Here we have a boulder of a granite-like substance. What is this rock telling us? Well, it’s letting me know I don’t know jack diddly about why it’s got those lovely mauve and blue colors in the left bits, or what that white streak is (probably pegmatite or quartz, but I didn’t walk over for a closer look – too many other goodies demanding my attention). But the main thing it’s saying is that things went crunch. The North Cascades are full of these plutons and batholiths, which formed when the North Cascades subcontinent ran in to North America. Subduction zones munched seafloor on both sides of the island, things heated up, and crustal rocks formed these lovely granitic melts over tens of millions of years. The Index batholith is about 35 million years old, just a youngster. Those melts welded the interloper on to North America.

When continents collide, and subduction zones subduct, you end up with far more fascinating stuff than granite.



I have no idea what this is. It’s metamorphic, that much I’m sure of. Enormous chunks of metamorphic rock end up here on the riverbanks. Even the granite doesn’t always seem to have escaped a good squishing.



This boulder fascinated me:



I’m not sure what it is, alas – getting better at identifying random chunks of rock, but a lot of stuff on the banks defeated me. But the shapes, the colors, the textures, of this boulder were mesmerizing. Hopefully, one of my geotweeps will know what we’re looking at.





The rocks here make me appreciate the early geologists all the more. Staring round in perplexity at such a variety of amazing stones, not knowing what many of them are, trying to make sense of it all and sometimes throwing my hands up in defeat, puts me in touch with the folks who started the field. And they didn’t even have geologic maps and plate tectonic theory to work with. They just had curiosity and intelligence and a gift for puzzling things out.

This looks like a breccia, or something mashed up in the subduction zone, or a breccia mashed up in the subduction zone:



It can be desperately hard to tell, especially for a rank amateur, what a rock is when it’s ripped from its context.

Like this sun-colored sensation:



There were a few of these, and they pop in those mostly-gray surroundings. They didn’t seem grainy enough for sandstone, but perhaps a metamorphosed variety thereof? Something else completely? Dunno. Someday, I’ll find out, and you just watch me end up writing an ode to them. I get that way about rocks. They make me all misty-eyed.

Here’s another fascinating boulder I’m at a loss to identify:



It’s whispering a few things to me. It’s talking about heat, and pressure, and strain. You can tell from the way it’s streaked and by its hardness. Hard times make for hard rocks.

A couple of close views, in which its character is revealed:





And by now you’re thinking, “Geez, Dana, you went a little wild on the saturation, there. Turned your thumb red.” That’s not the photo editor – I’d been washing rocks in the river. That river is fed by snowmelt, people, and it is fuh-reezing. In fact, when I was editing these, I kept trying for a flesh-colored thumb and wondering why the rocks were all washed out and dull until I remembered how red my hands were!

Here’s another bit of unnamed yum:



And by now it becomes clear I’ve got a hell of a lot to learn about rock and roll – I haven’t the foggiest what this is, why there are these rich brown stripes in it, and the actual mechanics of a river plucking it up and rolling it along until something that’s super-hard becomes rounded.

We haven’t been properly introduced, but I can’t help getting close.



This one was delightfully smooth, polished to a turn by its tumble in the river. I wanted to hold it and squeeze it and pet it and love it, and call it georgite.

Here’s one that’s kind of blah from a distance, but mesmerizing in macro.



I love textures like this, rocks that almost look like wood, with a wonderful grain. I wish I knew what it once was. Perhaps it’s one of those lightly-metamorphosed seafloor sediments that got stuffed into the trench. Some of the rocks round here were treated gently enough in their trip down the subduction zone and back up in the orogeny that fossils are still identifiable in them.

Here we have some suspected serpentinite.



The river brought out its colors wonderfully. And yes, I know, there should be something for scale, but what I had were my feet and my hands, both sets of which looked at that icy cold water and went, “No fucking way.” As I recall, it was one of the smaller samples, a little bigger than my hand.

Along the river bank with its mostly rounded rocks, right by that eye-popping bit of suspected serpentinite, an outlier caught my eye.



What was it? Part of the river bed? How had it managed not to get worn down? I ventured onto a nearby boulder and crouched for a close inspection.



Clay! A pure hunk of clay I could practically throw a pot from, right then and there. I hesitate to admit how excited this made me. I screamed “Clay!” over the cacophony of the river. Actually, shouted it more than once, because my poor intrepid companion couldn’t hear a bloody word and had no idea what I was shrieking over. Then he looked a bit bemused that I could get so excited over something so ordinary. But where I come from, clay is never in big wet chunks like this. It’s more like dry flakes. Finding blocks that you can actually model with, masquerading as a rock, is probably more captivating than it should be.

It also nearly tipped me into the river before I figured out what it was. Clay is, in fact, slippery when wet.

And just look at the awesome shapes it makes:



Now, really, can you blame me for getting so giddy?

Aaaand we’re right back to me being clueless.



But it’s purty.

Now, here’s something quite exciting:



This, my darlings, might quite possibly be an example of the Nason Ridge Magmatitic Gneiss, or a relation thereof. It’s certainly got to be a migmatite, anyway. This one’s for Christian Renggli, who clued me in.



Andrew Alden described migmatites as rocks that had “been buried very deep and squeezed very hard.” Fair description – you can tell this rock has had a hell of a life down there in the trench.

While we’re on the subject of gneiss….



Isn’t she a beaut?

This one, I think, may have been granite at one point in its life, or aspiring to become granite, or I could be completely and absolutely wrong, but I love the snowflake textures in it.



A closer look at what made it stand out from all the other pale-and-dark speckled rocks:



Different rocks affect me in different ways. This one gave me a serene sensation. I’m not sure why. There’s just something about it – no streaks, no speckles, just these dark and light patterns that look so much like snowflakes do when a few gather on a rail and get ready to melt – that made me sit back and breathe.  It still does that. Looking at it feels like a meditation.

Now, this one isn’t going to look like much, but I’m thrilled with it:



Marble, people! I’d swear that’s marble. I loves me some wild marble. We’ve got a bit of it, no deposits like Italy that I know of, but enough that we’ve got a town named Marblemount. Though that could’ve been named after limestone for people trying to be posh – with a town named Concrete nearby, you know there are limestone deposits. But I digress. Yes, we have marble in the wild, and yes, this seems to be a fine specimen. Makes me want to bust out the chisel and make like Michelangelo.

And, for our finale (drumroll, please), a fine bit of phyllite – or possibly slate:



Finding that shattered and gleaming was one of the high points of the day. Love that stuff. Very happy to have brought home a large piece of it. I can hold it in my hands and dream of deep sea floors that got nommed by a trench, then spat back out.

Okay, so that doesn’t quite sound romantic or captivating, but it’s what happened. And who says dreams can’t be humorous?

I shall have quite a lot more to say about this whole orogeny incident, the North Cascades Subcontinent, and even perhaps a fault when I get images sorted from our adventures up north. Watch this space.

River Walking Parte the Fourth: Rubbernecking at a Continental Trainwreck

Dojo Summer Sessions: Taking Stock, Going With the Flow

Here’s a post I think all writers should read. It’s got important concepts and questions we need to keep in mind if we wish to succeed. It takes the economic concept of stock and flow and turns it into a metaphor for writing:

But I actually think stock and flow is the master metaphor for media today. Here’s what I mean:
  • Flow is the feed. It’s the posts and the tweets. It’s the stream of daily and sub-daily updates that remind people that you exist.
  • Stock is the durable stuff. It’s the content you produce that’s as interesting in two months (or two years) as it is today. It’s what people discover via search. It’s what spreads slowly but surely, building fans over time.
I feel like flow is ascendant these days, for obvious reasons—but we neglect stock at our own peril. I mean that both in terms of the health of an audience and, like, the health of a soul. Flow is a treadmill, and you can’t spend all of your time running on the treadmill. Well, you can. But then one day you’ll get off and look around and go: Oh man. I’ve got nothing here.
But I’m not saying you should ignore flow! No: this is no time to hole up and work in isolation, emerging after long months or years with your perfectly-polished opus. Everybody will go: huh? Who are you? And even if they don’t—even if your exquisitely-carved marble statue of Boba Fett is the talk of the tumblrs for two whole days—if you don’t have flow to plug your new fans into, you’re suffering a huge (here it is!) opportunity cost. You’ll have to find them all again next time you emerge from your cave.

Now, seriously, go read the whole thing. Then you can come back here and continue the discussion. I’ll wait. I’ll even put the rest below a fold so you’re motivated.

That post has stayed with me for some time, now. Very useful stuff.

There’s another aspect of flow, too, that may have been outside the scope of that post, but which I think is important enough for us to jibber-jabber about. And it’s this: flow isn’t only about keeping yourself in front of people. It’s also about inspiration and knowledge. It’s about staying connected to a community that can help you write.

My Twitter stream went from a begrudged necessity for keeping up with Erik Klemetti’s migrations to most valuable resource ever. I’m drinking from a firehose of wisdom. The folks I follow constantly post links to things that make my writing brain go “Oooo I could use that!” If I get stuck, there’s someone around who can unstick me. If I have questions, I can get answers, or get pointed in the right direction. If I run out of motivation, I can ask for a righteous prod to the arse.

My blog keeps me writing even when I haven’t got any desire to write. It provides me readers, Wise ones, who will upon request tear apart anything that needs tearing down in order to be built back up. And it’s a huge motivator: I can see people are reading what I write. I can see my words matter to them. When I fall prey to doubt and despair, the readers of this blog are there to remind me that no, really, I’m a good writer and I can write things people enjoy reading.

If I neglected flow to invest all my time in stock, I’d have none of those things. And it’s possible, although not likely, I’d give up the lonely enterprise of putting one word after another, stop courting carpal tunnel syndrome, and wander off to do something else. What, I don’t know, because without flow, who would I share all the lovely adventures with? Most of my meatspace friends get sick of me showing them pretty rocks after the first dozen.

As in all things, the trick is finding the right balance. The right mix in ye olde portfolio, if we wish to continue the economic metaphor. There are times when flow threatens to take over completely. There are others when stock is nearly all. But that’s okay. I can put a lot of stock in stock while going with the flow, and being kept constantly busy means less time staring in despair at a stubbornly blank screen.

So them’s my thoughts. The floor is now yours, my darlings, and it’s not just a writer’s forum: most of you here have stock (your work) and flow (your Twitter et al). How has each fed the other for you?

Dojo Summer Sessions: Taking Stock, Going With the Flow

El Norte Day 1: Rosario Beach

So far, so fun. Sunday morning, the weather seemed pitiless. We left Seattle without much hope, but by the time we’d piddled our way through Mount Vernon and had lunch in Anacortes, the clouds relented, the sun shone, and we saw some of the most awesome fucking geology in the universe.

Here’s some outtakes to tide ye over until I can properly write this stuff up.



Moi atop Rosario Head. That’s Rosario Strait behind me, and some islands with no name on bloody online maps. I’m sure they have got names. We seem to name every bit of rock poking up above water round here. If anybody knows the names, bung ’em in comments.



Moi with some of the most delectable chert and shale I’ve ever seen. Look at it! Look at the folds! I’ll have sooo much to say about this in a few days. And very many delicious yummy photos of the various bits in all their accordioned glory.



And look – look what I found at the top of the head! I don’t know why this kind of thing makes me so happy. It just does. There’s another one up there, but we’ll save it for when I’ve got a reasonable internet connection (hotel wi-fi is teh suck).



At the top of the head is this enormous boulder of I know not what. The photo does not do it justice. It’s green! So green in some places, especially that concave bit, dark green and lovely. I have close-ups: we will be giving this boulder some loving attention.



Moi with ribbon chert and kayakers. Oh, mama, this side of the head is fantastic! It’s a paradise for someone who wanted to see really squished rocks. And behind my head is not ribbon chert – I believe that is old seafloor basalt, I shall have to engage in further investigations before I can be more certain. My book assures me those basalts should be there. And I think I found a fault. This bit of Washington geology is so yummy!



Uno mas. These rocks are like a box of chocolates – can’t stop at one, or two, or the whole damned box.

We are, in fact, headed back to Rosario Beach tomorrow, as we’d managed to arrive at high tide. There’s neato stuff hidden beneath the sea that shall be revealed. Any of you who’ve been there – tell me what I must not miss this time round!

El Norte Day 1: Rosario Beach

Los Links 7/29

I’m arse-kickingly busy, what with the research, preparing for trip, and taking trip, so no pithy sentences this week, I’m afraid. Titles will have to do. Didn’t want to deprive you of your premium linkage!

Norway Tragedy

IndieObserver.com: Before and After Terrorist IDed: Fox News Commenters Weigh In on Norway

Balloon Juice: Give me all your liberal policies or I will kill you

Think Progress: Pat Buchanan: Norwegian Right-Wing Terrorist ‘Breivik May Be Right’ and Norway Terrorist Anders Breivik Purchased High-Capacity Gun Clips From The United States

 CNN Belief Blog: My Take: Norway attacks show why you can’t #blamethemuslims

Opinionator: Homegrown Hurt

Google+ Fiasco

Bug Girl’s Blog: Why Google+ hates women

Thomas Monopoly: Dear Google

Pulp Tech: Google Plus Deleting Accounts En Masse: No Clear Answers

Techi: The Google+ honeymoon is over

Mike Cane’s xBlog: The Google+ Real Name Policy Is Wrong

Punctuated Equilibrium: Google’s gormless “no pseudonym” policy and Google+ and pseudonymity: An open letter to Google

Adventures in Science and Ethics: Pseudonymity and ethics (with a few more thoughts on Google+).

Liminal States: Why it Matters: Google+ and Diversity

Infotropism: Preliminary results of my survey of suspended Google+ accounts

TekFrenzy: Google Plan To Address The Issue Of Pseudonymity In Future

Caterina.net: Anonymity and Pseudonyms in Social Software

Science

Bad Astronomy: Atlantis, one last time in the Sun and The fiery descent of Atlantis… seen from space!

NewsObserver: UNC research uncovers new DNA building blocks

Neuroskeptic: New Antidepressant – Old Tricks

Andy Ellington’s Blog: On idiocy

The Scientist: The Beginning of the End for Bananas?

The Primate Diaries: Stressing Motherhood: How Biology and Social Inequality Foster Maternal Infanticide

Assignment: Impossible: From The Writer’s Desk: New Questions, New Frontiers

Respectful Insolence: Consumer Reports and credulity towards alternative medicine

Science Not Fiction: Captain America Gets Enhancement Right

Glacial Till: Meteorite Monday: Basic chondrite classification

Boston.com: A whiff of history

Slate: L’Eau Pour Chien

Superbug: Is Polio Eradication Slipping Out of Reach?

Educated Erosion: Five Reasons Geology Rocks 

I Can Haz Cheezburger: Chemistry Cat: Science and Puns, Together at Last!

NASA Lunar Science Institute: Unique volcanic complex discovered on Moon’s far side

The Artful Amoeba: Lichens vs. the Almighty Prion

Life, Unbounded: When Worlds…Perturb

Not Exactly Rocket Science: Is the parasite Toxoplasma gondii linked to brain cancer? and Insert Tongue Here – flower arrows guide fly tongues

Speaking of Research: The Value of Animals in Pre-Clinical Trials

Mind Hacks: Diagnostic dilemma, innit bruv

Discover: A Body Fit for a Freaky-Big Brain

Medialand: “Majestically Scientific” Federal Study On BPA Has Stunning Findings: So Why Is The Media Ignoring It? (via )

CMBR: Holy schist! That’s a lot of Earth science

Boundary Vision: Science Education and Changing People’s Minds Part 2: Writing to convince

Media Matters: If You Wish To Make Up Facts From Scratch…

From the Lab Bench: Super-Hero Experiment #2: The Waggle Dance

Superbug: Attack of the Deadly Slime: Farm Effluent Ruins French Beaches

The Green Apple Core: Drunk on books 

Weather Underground: Heat Waves (4) A Climate Case Study

Reading the Washington Landscape: Antecedent Yakima River and Geology Prank at Amboy Crater – Repost

Writing

Anne R. Allen’s Blog: Indie, Big Six, or Small Press Publishing: Why Not Try All Three?

Red Room: Our Publishing Nightmare-An Author’s Lesson(s)

Adventures in Space: After The Call: Don’t Ignore Your Gut 

Publishing Perspectives: The Hybrid Writer: Balancing Traditional and Self-publishing

WordPress: How to Get More Traffic

Terrible Minds: Turning Writers Into Motherfucking Rock Stars

Religion and Atheism

***Dave Does the Blog: Bryan Fischer is a Dolt (Folks Who Hate My Hate are Haters Edition)

Choice in Dying: What is the Church for?

ABC News: Church says sorry over forced adoptions

The Irish Times: Why is Vatican so miffed at reaction to Cloyne report?

Rock Beyond Belief: My ‘Atheist / Flying Spaghetti Monster’ military dog tags

Women’s Issues

Lousy Canuck: The Problem with Privilege (or: cheap shots, epithets and baseless accusations for everyone!) and The Problem with Privilege: some correct assertions, with caveats

Minnesota Skeptics: Nice Cans?! FFS, Really?

Sociological Images: Reception of Rape Victims: Silsbee, TX Edition

Lifehacker: Basic Self-Defense Moves Anyone Can Do (and Everyone Should Know)

Comment is Free: Richard Dawkins, check the evidence on the ‘chilly climate’ for women

Butterflies and Wheels: Claiming to speak for 

The Hathor Legacy: On rejecting men and rape culture

Politics

Mother Jones: The Teen Suicide Epidemic in Michele Bachmann’s District

The Conscience of a Liberal: The Cult That Is Destroying America

The Atlantic: Washington Isn’t Broken, the Republican Party Is

UN Dispatch: House Votes to Eliminate Funding for UNFPA

Hullaballoo: Balance!

ThinkProgress: GOP Congressman: If We Take The Senate And White House In 2012, The EPA Will Be ‘Discontinued’

Natural Resources: Ten Least Wanted Provisions Of The Interior And Environment Appropriations Bill

Society and Culture

Hugo Schwyzer: “Because it feels good”: the starting point for talking to kids about sex

Inside Higher Ed: Who Is Punished for Plagiarism?

Furious Purpose: The dire real-life effects of homophobia

The Guardian: Russell Brand on Amy Winehouse: ‘We have lost a beautiful, talented woman’

WWdN: In Exile: if you cut me, i will bleed

Murphy’s Law: The true story of how I shot a cop and went to jail (and something about a dildo)

Guardian: Jailed in Singapore for writing a book they didn’t like

Danger Room: FBI ‘Islam 101′ Guide Depicted Muslims as 7th-Century Simpletons

Skepchick: Skepticism and Disability by Chris “Gonz Blinko” Hofstader

Los Links 7/29