Envisioning A New Moab Mountain Landform
In May 2009, we departed Los Angeles, California, and then traveled Interstate Highways I-15 and I-70 to our destination in Moab, Utah.  After two days and 700 miles (1125 k) of mountain and desert driving, we neared our goal.
As the late afternoon sunlight slanted across a 
desolate stretch of desert, we spotted a forest of billboards and an 
oasis of trees to the north of I-70.  With its unexpected splash of 
greenery, the City of Green River, Utah lay
 hidden amidst that foliage. The former railroad and mining town became 
famous in the 1930’s with an anti-peddler law that some say was a thinly
 disguised anti-vagrancy law.  Henceforth, many Western town blatantly 
the "get out of town before sundown" law henceforth known as The Green 
River Ordinance.  Well into the 1960s, official roadsigns at the 
entrance of many Utah towns boasted, "Green River Ordinance Enforced 
Here".  It was like saying that the town had "no parking", even if one 
did not have an automobile. Today, Green River is home to nearly one 
thousand people, almost twenty percent of whom call themselves Hispanic or Latino. 
 With "prior rights" determining senioity in western water rights, Green
 River's acequis (water ditches) dated back to the 1830s, when it was a 
shallow-water crossing along the Old Spanish Trail.  Today, Green River appears to be the most well watered town in the deserts of the West.
As with many other highway routes in the West, a 
narrow strip of flat terrain determined the location of Crescent 
Junction.  During the 1830s, Spanish Americans pioneered the Old Spanish
 Trail through here.  In the 1850’s, Captain John W. Gunnison surveyed a
 rail line through here and to the west.  In 1883, Gunnison’s dream 
became a reality when the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railway
 laid tracks through here.  During the twentieth century, US Highways 6 
& 191 intersected and shared routes through Crescent Junction, 
followed in the 1960s by Interstate Highway I-70.  Natural gas pipelines
 and fiber optic communications cables now share that route, as well.  
Despite the crowding of transportation and utilities through the 
junction, it retains the look of a sparcely populated place.
In contemporary American culture, we consider any 
place in the West with two hundred or more years of European-stock 
settlement to be old, if not ancient.  With its raw, dry landscape, 
current day travelers may have difficulty believing that this area 
was once inhabited by what we can legitimately call "the Ancients".  As proof of Ancient habitation, abundant Indian rockart at the nearby Book Cliffs
 dates from between 2000 BCE and the 1800s CE.  That span of continuous 
culture was almost twenty times longer than the continuum of White men 
in the West.
Recently, U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) project 
managers and engineers began relocating 135 acres of uranium tailings 
from Moab, Utah to Crescent Junction.  If they and the public have a 
sense of history and a sense of humor, desert travelers of the future 
may well see that pyramid in the desert.  
After decades of delay, five trainloads of 
nuclear-contaminated soil now move each week across the desert.  The 
train travels back and forth, from the fragile depository by the 
Colorado River at Moab to a fully-lined hardpan disposal site at 
Crescent Junction.  
If lack of imagination and traditional landfill 
techniques prevail, the new uranium pile will look much like the old 
one, which is so nondescript that it barely shows in photographs taken a
 mile or two away.  With its flat top and natural red-dirt camoflage, 
the pile is out of sight and too often out of mind.  If anyone has a 
mountain that they would like to hide, they should come to Moab and see 
if they can even locate the uranium pile.  However, if the DOE staff 
uses its collective imagination, they could construct a Crescent 
Junction Pyramid to rival the Great Pyramid of Giza,
 in Egypt.  With a raw material stockpile covering one hundred 
thirty-five acres, buried up to 200 ft (61 m) deep, they should have an 
easy time.  If they construct a new pyramid at least 455 ft (135 m) 
high, Moab, Utah, or perhaps Crescent Junction could claim bragging 
rights over the tallest organic, nuclear-powered pyramid in the world.
Why create a pyramid in the desert?  The single word, “tourism” should be enough to get residents of Grand County, Utah
 interested.  Imagine that place, twenty or thirty years in the future, 
let alone two thousand years hence.  If the DOE can mitigate radiation 
danger at the new site, “See the New Seventh Wonder of the World”, could
 become a long-term motto for the site.  
In order to transport materials from the existing uranium pile, the Union Pacific Railroad
 recently rebuilt the roadbed and upgraded the rails on the Cane Creek 
Subdivision between Moab and Crescent Junction.  By limiting future 
pyramid-access to sanctioned rail visits, Moab could create a railway 
excursion business, similar in scope to the long running one in Durango, Colorado. 
 Tourists could leave their automobiles in Moab, visit the pyramid at 
midday and return to Moab in time for dinner.  Although more tourists 
would visit Moab, highway miles driven would decline.  Since the new 
uranium pile is a necessity, it behooves planners to make it every bit 
as attractive to tourists as the natural wonders so abundant in the 
surrounding Canyonlands area.  
The City of Moab, Utah’s Grand County, the Union 
Pacific, the State of Utah and the United States DOE together have the 
opportunity to transform a nuclear pariah into a beautiful and sacred 
place.  By studying and using as models, other remote, spiritual sites, 
DOE planners could borrow the best aspects of each and create a monument
 to peace and nuclear safety that would endure beyond our time.  
Hotel and casino planners created the pyramidal Luxor Hotel
 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  Why should we not create a real pyramid in 
Southeastern Utah?  By combining the windswept, solitary feeling of the 
Ames Brothers Pyramid with the remote magnificence of Chaco Canyon, New Mexico,
 contemporary planners could create a monument of lasting value.  When 
completed, the Moab/Crescent Junction Pyramid should stand-alone, with 
nothing more than a railroad siding, an interpretive center and a 
footpath near its base.  
Imagine a post-nuclear age when schoolchildren from 
all over the world might visit the pyramid.  Docents familiar with the 
history of “Moab Mountain” could tell the story.  
The story would begin with man’s lust for power, in 
the form of nuclear weapons.  After World War II, nuclear frenzy was so 
strong that men and machines moved mountains of uranium ore to Moab 
Utah.  There, they extracted the Earth’s most dangerous and unstable 
elements.  During the course of its operation, the not-ironically named 
Atlas Uranium Mill utilized over 420,000 tons of sulfuric acid and 
unknown amounts of caustic soda
 to leach radioactive isotopes out of the raw ore.  When the mill shut 
down in the 1980s, all of the chemicals, buildings and equipment 
utilized during its thirty-year operating life were buried at the site. 
 Although extraction wells later dotted the site, a natural stream 
running beneath the pile continued to conduct unknown quantities of 
radioactive material, chemicals and heavy metals into the adjacent Colorado River.  
Over the following twenty-five years, group consciousness slowly shifted from fear of the “Other”
 to fear of our own powers of self-destruction.  As consciousness 
continued to evolve, fear of immanent nuclear disasters became stronger 
than the ephemeral security possession of the nuclear weapons offered 
us in the first place.  Beginning in the late 1980s, a coalition of 
government agencies, private citizens, environmental groups and the 
press identified and publicized the scope of the nuclear dangers at Moab.
In 2005, we learned more about ancient, paleofloods on the Upper Colorado River
 near Moab, Utah.  A DOE study determined that “the geometry and 
position of ancient Colorado River gravels buried under the surface of 
Moab Valley show(ed) that the river has shifted back and forth across 
the mill and tailings site in the recent geologic past”. 
Our future docents' parable would include both 
historical and ancient information.  If a flood the size of at least one
 that hit the Moab Valley since 2000 BCE were to occur in the near 
future, much if not all of the uranium pile could wash downstream 
towards Lake Powell.  As we know, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Los Angeles all
 rely on Colorado River water for a significant percentage of their 
water supplies.  If a megaflood were to hit Moab prior to the removal 
and relocation of the uranium pile, release of its carcinogens and 
mutagens could render much of Utah, Arizona, Nevada and California uninhabitable.
As the docents said to their future visitors, the 
megaflood held off until early spring 2015.  By then, DOE engineers 
had protected the pile with a riprap rock casing, similar in 
construction to the Castaic Dam in Southern California.  At the time of 
its construction, Castaic Dam's conservative design was considered to 
be a "overkill" solution to contain Castaic Reservoir.  After the 1928 
collapse of the nearby St. Francis Dam, engineers and the public alike 
demanded that the Castaic Dam be built to the highest seismic 
standards.  Tested soon after completion by the nearby 1971 Sylmar 
Earthquake, Castaic Dam stood undamaged.  Not ironically, the 
cross-section of Castaic Dam is similar to the profile of the Great 
Pyramid at Gisa, Egypt.  Both are expected to last for a long time into 
the future.  
In 2018, the Colorado River tested the uranium 
pile’s temporary encasement, but it held fast against the flood.  By 
2035, when the original pile was gone, workers who had started their 
careers moving the uranium pile used their final working years to remove
 the old Moab containment dam.  As their final contribution, they reused
 all of its boulders as cladding for the new Crescent Junction Pyramid. 
 If that stone encasement could withstand the force of a megaflood along
 the Colorado River, they felt confident that its reuse at pyramid could
 shelter that new mountain for millennia to come.
As the docents of the future ended their tale of fear and hope, students reflected on how we humans had used and abused Mother Earth. 
 Old Moab Mountain was a monument to ignorance, greed and fear.  
New "Moab Mountain" stood as proof that the wisdom of the Ancients 
revealed itself to mankind in the early twenty-first century and that we
 listened.
                        
By James McGillis at 05:23 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link

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