The Moab Rim Escarpment - As it is Above, So it is Below
One of the things that I love about Moab, Utah is the juxtaposition of desert and mountain environments.  Midway between those two extremes is the Moab Rim, a towering escarpment that overlooks the Spanish Valley and the town of Moab.  
According to information on the website “The 
Geologic History of Moab”, during the “Tertiary Period, the Moab Fault 
allowed salt to erode, collapsing the center of an anticline.  A fault line runs down either side of the Moab valley, joining just upstream of the Moab Uranium Pile, near the entrance to Arches National Park. 
 Perhaps because of water running down along the fault line, salt 
dissolved away deep under the rock of Moab.  The overlying slab sunk 
down, creating a  'collapsed anticline' that is the Spanish and Moab valley”.
'collapsed anticline' that is the Spanish and Moab valley”. 
Bisected, as it is, by the Colorado River,
 one wonders if the whole valley might at one time have been a lake, 
impounded on the downstream side by that solid rim.  If so, did it 
slowly and inexorably wear away until the river canyon established 
itself, finally reaching the natural, smooth gradient that the river 
exhibits today?  If any geologists know the answer to this question, we 
would love to hear about it via email.
The Grand Canyon of the Colorado River is famous to most visitors as a place where we look down and into the canyon.  The Spanish Valley is a place, similar to Zion National Park where, for the most part, we look up to the canyon  rim.
rim.  
One exception to this is if you hike the Hidden 
Valley Trail, which climbs 680 from the valley floor to the top of the 
rim and a final elevation of 5270 feet.  From there, one has myriad 
views that include Potash, Moab, the Spanish Valley and Geyser Pass in the Manti La Sal National Forest.  Since the whole hike is only two miles one-way, it should be on the “to do list” of every reasonably fit visitor to Moab.
.jpg) If
 you plan to hike the trail, it is best to start early, before the heat 
of the day.  Take plenty of water and a camera to document the 
spectacular scenery and late season wild flowers.  Since this is a protected area, do not stray from the path, as even one off-path hiker can leave tracks that will not heal for years, if not decades in this fragile environment.
If
 you plan to hike the trail, it is best to start early, before the heat 
of the day.  Take plenty of water and a camera to document the 
spectacular scenery and late season wild flowers.  Since this is a protected area, do not stray from the path, as even one off-path hiker can leave tracks that will not heal for years, if not decades in this fragile environment.Another way to enjoy the Moab Rim is from below.  My
 favorite place for doing this is west off of Highway 191 on Canyon Rim 
Road, which starts on the south end of the Moab Rim Campark (at 1900 South Highway, 191, Moab, Utah).  The pavement ends just past the power lines that parallel  Highway
 191.  If you continue up the dirt road, you can park where the road 
turns right and get out of your car.  With its easy access and immediate
 remoteness, it is a great place for a disabled visitor to get away from
 civilization for a bit.
Highway
 191.  If you continue up the dirt road, you can park where the road 
turns right and get out of your car.  With its easy access and immediate
 remoteness, it is a great place for a disabled visitor to get away from
 civilization for a bit.
If you have four-wheel drive, or are riding a 
mountain bike, you can continue on to a series of connecting dirt tracks
 that take you to the base of the Moab Rim.  Either way, there are 
several desert watercourses (dry, except during a storm) that you can walk without damaging the fragile soils and plant life that you will encounter. 
Since this is one of my favorite places in the 
Spanish Valley, please do our environment a favor if you visit here.  
Bring a plastic grocery bag and fill it with any beer bottles or other 
small trash you might find there.  If each visitor removes even a small amount of trash, the 
occasional “hell raiser” will be less likely to see this as an open 
dumping ground.
 there.  If each visitor removes even a small amount of trash, the 
occasional “hell raiser” will be less likely to see this as an open 
dumping ground. 
If the Moab Rim were located anywhere else except 
among the profusion of natural wonders that surround the Spanish Valley,
 it would probably rank National Monument status.  Since it is open land and policed on the honor system by the Bureau of Land Management, I hope that everyone who cares about the Moab Rim will help protect and enjoy its unspoiled beauty.
By James McGillis at 07:35 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

 
 
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