Thank you for your patience while we retrieve your images.
Taken 23-Aug-09
Visitors 3


48 of 50 photos
Thumbnails
Info
Photo Info

Dimensions3272 x 4961
Original file size12.4 MB
Image typeJPEG
Color spaceAdobe RGB (1998)
Date taken23-Aug-09 10:12
Date modified3-Sep-18 11:12
Shooting Conditions

Camera modelCanon EOS 5D Mark II
Focal length58 mm
Exposure1/125 at f/11
ISO speedISO 100
The Pinnacles

The Pinnacles

The Pinnacles

The history of the "pinnacles" began
about 7,700 years ago when the eruptions of
Mt. Mazama were reaching their climax. Torrents
of red-hot, gas-charged pumice poured down
Mazama's slopes at speeds of up to 100 mph
(160kph). On top of this came a flow of heavier
rocks called scoria. These glowing avalanches
flooded downslope for many miles, leaving
deep deposits in their wake.

Temperatures in the deposits may have exceeded
750 F (400 C). Plumes of vapors appeared, as
gasses escaped from the settling rocks through
vents called fumaroles. Minerals in the gasses,
combined with extreme heat, welded the sides of
the fumaroles in the shape of slender cones. Since
then, streams have eroded a canyon through the
deposits, exposing the cones. Many of these fossil
fumaroles are hollow.