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= Crater Location Where
Photo Taken
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Meteor Crater Page
Meteor Crater Floor Tour
We have been exceedingly
lucky in our trips to Meteor Crater. The weather has always been beautiful. And
that was how it was again on the morning of our descent to the bottom. We had
an appointment to meet our guides at nine o’clock and we arrived a few minute
early. Guess we were kind of excited. Here our guide Richard
☼ starts us on our first steps down
the Astronauts trail.
We were loaded for bear as the saying goes. We had video cameras, film cameras, and digital cameras. Water, snacks, extra batteries, GPS units, handheld communicators, and a lot more stuff rounded out the contents of our packs. Of course I had my notes on where things were and I had spent the last couple weeks refreshing myself on the layout of the crater floor.
We were going to use the
familiar trail that runs rather gently down the western wall of the crater. It
begins in the northwest corner just beyond the ruins of the original museum
building. It is a little steep initially and has several tight switchbacks but
quickly becomes an easy incline that runs all the way to the bottom edge of the
talus.
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I stood at the bottom of the trail for several moments just taking in the atmosphere of the place. The first thing that I noted would remain the most compelling of my impressions for the entire day. I was caught up in the utter stillness of the crater floor. It is profoundly quiet.
The others were off to the
left of me among the giant boulders at the foot of the north wall. I joined
them for the obligatory picture beside the largest of the boulders.
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The remains of the pipelines run through this area and they were easy to
find. Going just a little east would put us in the spot where the lower camp
had been. As we walked that way I wondered how much evidence would still be
there. It is sort of funny how time can turn what was once trash into historic
artifacts. The many rusting tin cans and bits china; broken pieces of glass
purpled from exposure to the sun for nearly a hundred years told us we had
arrived at the lower camp. This had for a few years been a bustling center of
activity in the crater. Several large buildings had been on the site, workers
had meals here, and they dreamed their dreams of El Dorado here. Old
photographs of the lower camp are just like pictures of any of a hundred mining
camps scattered across the southwest. Whether it was gold or meteoric iron
probably made little difference to the miners, the work was the same. I like to
believe the dreams were the same as well. There was certainly the same ghost
town feel for me as I walked among the remains. The location of one of the
early shafts is near the lower camp and we found it with little difficulty.
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Looking straight across the
crater from the lower camp one gets a good view of “Silica Hill”.
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This mound rising several feet in height is much more noticeable than we
thought it would be. The location of the workings that were once on Silica Hill
is our next stop.
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All the shafts on the floor
have been refilled except number 2. They, like all abandoned mine shafts were a
hazard and so were filled. But some settling of the fill has occurred and most
can be found now as depressions a foot or two deep. The location of many of the
drill sites can still be found by the bright white rock flour that covers those
areas.
Beyond Silica Hill as we
head across the crater is the very center where most of the early activity was
focused.
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Mr. Barringer was convinced in the beginning that the round shape of the crater
indicated that the asteroid had plunged straight down and was buried beneath
the center. Several large and expensive excavations were conducted in this
area. The remains of the machinery are still here.
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The great boiler and winch can be seen from the rim of the crater and
the pulverized rock dug up has marked the area clearly as a brilliant white
spot. But, it was exciting to touch the machines and marvel at the wonderful
state of preservation they are in.
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Behind the fenced area in
the crater center is the location of the main shaft that was designed by
Barringer himself.
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It was to be a two-compartment mineshaft. It was intended to be very
efficient in moving vast amounts of nickel-iron to the surface. However, it
like the previous shaft had to be abandoned because of the quicksand
encountered at about two hundred feet.
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Lying around the site are timbers, cables, and wheels, all now silently
testifying about the determination of one man to find out what happens when an unstoppable
object strikes the immovable barrier. A life size cutout of an astronaut in a
spacesuit is there next to an American flag.
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They provide the visitors at the museum far above a size reference. But,
just so you will know the boiler is very large. It measures over fifteen feet
in length and forty inches in diameter.
From the center of the
crater we strike out toward the east wall and a visit to shaft number two which
is the one still used for research. It is covered with a wooden lid.
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There are solar panels nearby to charge batteries, which power lights in
the shaft. On our way there we walk through the part of the crater floor called
the Playa. This is an area easily seen in any aerial photograph. We note as we
cross it that the vegetation changes from the scattered scruff of dry grass to
a more abundant and greener small flowering plant. The location of the shaft is
near the edge of this playa area but still well inside the edge of the talus.
Around the shaft is the same characteristic mound of white powdered rock. But
if you know to look you can see that some is white and some are different
shades of a very light ivory color. As the miners dug they avoided creating a
single great heap of material by piling what they brought up in several spots
around the opening. This has preserved for scientists an easily accessible set
of samples of the different layers beneath the crater floor.
We leave shaft number two
and make a loop to the north to where another shaft was located. There is very
little remaining there and we soon pass by shaft number two again as we make
our way beyond it to one of the better assemblages of old machinery.
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Up near the talus on the eastern side of the crater lying presumably
where originally left is much of one of the drill rigs.
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This portion of the crater floor was the area where in a very short period of
time many holes were drilled. We spend some time exploring here. None of
us was familiar with drilling rigs to any degree, but I determine to take
photos to show to someone that is knowledgeable and let them tell me more.
We head back across the
crater toward the center passing again through the comparatively lush Playa.
When we arrive at the far side of the white mound we peer through the fence
down into the top of shaft number three. It is unfilled at least for some
distance down and we hold our cameras as high as possible up the fence and
point them down into the shaft.
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just to try and get a picture of what the shafts looked like nearly a hundred years
ago. This is a nice place to rest a minute and eat a snack, drink some water.
We have done a lot of talking as we walked along, but as I sat eating the
silence of the crater swept over me again. For several minutes I just absorbed
it, till it was suddenly broken by the cries of a hawk circling above us. We
watched the majestic creature work the thermals and currents of the crater for
a long time as we finished our small lunch. But soon it was time to press on.
A light plane crashed in the
crater many years ago and we knew that the remains of it were along the western
edge in the bottom of the talus. What we were really surprised about was how
very little of the plane we would find. We had expected the majority of the
craft to be there.
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What was there was a short section of the fuselage and one other very tiny
piece. We inquired about what happened to the rest and were told that some of
it was lifted out by a Huey helicopter and the remainder was disposed of down
the main shaft.
There are many groupings of
old timbers that have fallen into the crater along the western side. They are
seen clumped in the gullies. We happened to actually pass a large group of
timbers in an area where there was some drilling in the thirties after
Barringer’s death. There was a wooden platform and I wondered if it was from
that derrick.
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We were in the area of the so-called Jakosky anomaly. Jakosky had done a
geophysical study and thought something was buried in that area. But, studies
since have not led to any conclusive determination that there is more of
anything under the floor there than elsewhere.
We leave behind the western
wall and head across the talus toward the south wall and the horizontal tunnel.
It sits well up near the top of the talus.
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The waste rock pile of the horizontal tunnel is one of the most
recognizable features on the entire wall of the crater. Except for the few
visible trails there is little on the walls that is manmade. The biggest
exceptions are these two waste rock piles on the south wall. The
nineteen-twenties found the crater again a buzz of activity with a great
drilling program on the top of the south rim. The red streak is from that
program.
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During the beginnings of the drilling the drill stem broke and the drill tools
were lost. It was determined that they might be recovered if a tunnel was dug
back into the crater wall below the rig. Barringer thought this was a dangerous
activity because of the shattered state of the rocks. But the tunnel was dug
and the tools were recovered and the drilling continued. Obstacles were hit
several times and some were drilled around but finally at 1376 feet the bit stuck
in something and could not be freed. However, before the drill stuck fast it
had gone through many feet of weathered meteoric material. Barringer was final
convinced that the location of some of the great meteorite had been found.
As I reached the flat top of
the waste rock pile and stood in front of the opening of the tunnel I was just
thrilled.
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I don’t know if my companions realized that this was the high point for me or
not. But, this was like the summit of Everest. I just lingered there taking
video and stills and digital photos. It is also a wonderful vantage point to
view the rest of the crater.
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We could see where we had been only hours before and got a real
appreciation for the size of the crater. Those locations now looked very far
off. We did not venture into the tunnel for that is strictly forbidden.
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But I could see in about forty feet. It was fully timbered; completely
lined with wood. The desert environment and the darkness of the tunnel have
left the wood light in color. Not unlike what you might find in a lumberyard
new. However, Barringer’s fears of collapse have finally been realized.
Sometime in the last few years with no one knowing the tunnel caved in.
Originally 400 feet long it now goes in only about a hundred feet. Even more reason
to be avoided by would be explorers.
Next to the waste rock pile
of the horizontal tunnel is another pile. We hiked over there for a peek at
what was dug.
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There was the opening of a short tunnel that we were told was used for
storage.
We had intended all day to leave the crater interior by the Zigzag Trail in the south east corner. But, as we stood near the top of the talus and at the foot of the steep wall we looked across to that trail and decided to hike out from where we were.
I have over the last few
years consciously made an effort to work on my fear of heights. He has
delighted in watching me on the platform at the crater clinging to the railings
for dear life. So I have to admit I was thrilled by the thought of climbing out
right here just to the side of the south cliffs.
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But, it was a thrill tempered by some remaining acrophobia. This is I think one
of the steepest areas of the crater wall. There is a trail to be seen from a
distance but up close it was easier just picking your way upward. I took some
of the best photographs I have on the climb out.
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It was a very rewarding choice of exit up to the rim. As we were climbing the
cry of the hawk returned to our ears and yet when we looked we saw not one but
a pair of the great birds circling in the air near us.
A bit of rest and some water at the top; then the hike along the western part of the rim brought a close to our day on the crater floor. We completed my long list of things to see and added to it things I had no idea were there. We wish to thank Meteor Crater Enterprises once again for the opportunity to take the pictures that have made this website and story possible. We hope that you have enjoyed this and learned something new. We hope also that you have gotten a little of the air of history that permeates Meteor Crater.