Sandstone arch at southern Nevada's Valley of Fire State Park collapses (I think it still looks like a dragon, but now one lying down with wings above it)
Gone: Park supervisor Jim Hammons investigates the site where the Natural Arch collapsed at the Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada
Gone in an instant! Sandstone arch at southern Nevada park collapses
1st June 2010
A prominent sandstone arch at Valley
of Fire State Park in southern Nevada has collapsed.
Park rangers said it appears Natural Arch was
claimed by forces that will eventually destroy about 300 others in the
park: gravity and erosion.
They said horseback riders notified them about the damage Wednesday, and no one has reported seeing it fall. While it's unclear exactly why and when the arch collapsed, there's no evidence of vandalism, rangers added.
Before: The Natural Arch before it collapsed this week
'Maybe someone tried to take a
picture on the rock, which we don't recommend, but there's nothing here
that proves this was done on purpose,' park supervisor Jim Hammons told
the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
The arch is along the Natural Arch Trail near the park's east
entrance. Standing on a rock formation about 40 feet (12 meters) off the
ground, the arch was nearly 6 feet (2 meters) tall and 5 feet (1.5
meters) across.
About a
decade ago, another arch in the park, Mosquito Rock, collapsed after a
combination of wind and rain during a storm.
Hammons said the same combination could have
contributed to the collapse of Natural Arch, located about 55 miles (88
kilometers) northeast of Las Vegas.
'It's not a strong rock,' he said. 'That's why we really don't have rock climbing out here. After enough water this stuff can break like a dirt clod.'
The collapse left piles of crumbled, powdery red remains on
Natural Arch's northwest side and a larger chunk of rock on the nearby
trail.
The arch, which
once resembled a dragon feeding its young, now appears more like a
crescent. The long, rocky span that some hikers nicknamed the "dragon"
is no more.
Like others in the park, Natural Arch was formed when sandstone was whittled down over time into its distinctive and photogenic formation.
Article: HERE



After so many millions of years, this is bound to happen. Still it is sad to see.
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Yes, it is... but still beautiful in its changed state
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