In November 2016, I made my first trip to Death Valley  National Park. While there, I visited many of the most famous sites in the  park. After visiting  Zabriskie Point
 at sundown, I camped at the Furnace Creek Campground for  several 
nights. At the Furnace Creek Visitors Center, I purchased a large format
 book, titled “Death  Valley – Hottest Place on Earth”, by author Roger Naylor.
 
After returning home, I read that book from cover to cover, looking for 
new  places to visit on subsequent trips. Although there are too many 
fascinating  places to chronicle here, one place in particular struck my
 fancy. Touted as the  only legitimate four-wheel drive road in Death 
Valley National Park, that place  is  Titus Canyon.
 
In
 May 2017, I bought the perfect vehicle to take on the dirt, gravel and 
bare  rock surfaces that comprise the twenty-eight mile Titus Canyon 
Road. That vehicle  is a  Nissan Titan XD, lifted six-inches and powered by a Cummins  Turbo-Diesel engine. In December 2017, I camped again at Furnace Creek  Campground and made a day trip to Titus Canyon.
 
To reach the start of the one-way Titus Canyon Road, I first drove eleven miles  north on California 190. At the Aptly named  Beatty Junction, I turned right on Beatty Road, which is a shortcut to Daylight Pass and to  Beatty, Nevada,
 beyond. After enjoying the multivarious geography of  Daylight Pass, I 
crossed the Nevada State Line, where the highway designation is  Nevada 
374. That section, from Beatty Junction to the turn-off at Titus Canyon 
 Road was about twenty-three miles.
 
By
 the time I achieved the summit at Daylight Pass, daylight itself 
appeared to  be in short supply. I elected to skip the extra four-mile 
trip to Beatty, and  the nearby ghost town of Rhyolite. About four miles
 shy of Beatty; I almost  overshot the signed turnoff for Titus Canyon. 
After turning around, I headed  west on the one-way Titus Canyon Road. 
At first, the landscape of the  surrounding Amargosa  Valley
 consisted mostly of sagebrush. If you go this way, the initial stretch 
 of gravel road will rattle your bones like one monotonous washboard.
 
After the mind-numbing washboard section, a sweeping turn to the south 
marks the  beginning of your ascent. There, at one of the few wide spots
 in the road, I  stopped to talk with three adventure motorcyclists that
 had recently passed me  on the washboard section. With the suspension 
systems on their bikes pressed to  the limit by the terrain, they were 
already feeling the stress of Titus Canyon  Road. After an amiable 
conversation, the three riders traveled on ahead of me.
 
During
 that stop, I discovered that I had dropped my mobile telephone 
somewhere  along the way. Unable to find it, I began to fear that it had
 flipped out of my  truck near the beginning of the road. Since I have a
 Bluetooth hookup for the  phone in my truck, I decided to call home, 
using the voice-activated system. To  my amazement, there was cell phone
 coverage in that remote location. I spoke  with Carrie  McCoy, telling her that at least I knew the phone was in the truck.
 
As we spoke, I noticed the sun continuing its winter slink toward the 
horizon.  In deep ravines, such as Titus Canyon, the visible sun can set
 quite early. Not  wanting to complete my trip in the dark, I abandoned 
my phone-search and  traveled on. Without access to the camera on my 
phone, I had only my Sony A6000
  camera, with its telephoto lens attached. The road was too dusty to 
change  lenses, so I eschewed any close-ups of nearby rock formations, 
opting instead  for a longer, narrower perspective.
 
If you venture on, you will encounter an ill-defined area called  Titanothere Canyon.
 The name Titanothere Canyon derives from the 1933  discovery there of a
 massive fossil skull. It was of a long extinct hooved  animal, dating 
back to the  Oligocene Period, over 32 million years ago. If the  ancient Titanothere
 had hooves, did it share any other characteristics with  early 
mammalian species? Perusing online images of its skull, you will see  
aspects that evoke a lizard, a wild boar or a camel, and even a dash of 
 rhinoceros.
 
Regardless
 of its genetic heritage, the top of a rocky pass, eroded into  
impossibly steep slopes seemed an unusual place to find a hooved animal.
  Although camels are the kings of sandy desert travel, they could not 
have negotiated the  unforgiving terrain
 of what is now Titanothere Canyon. Something big must  have changes 
since those namesake beasts had roamed here. In the area, igneous,  
metamorphic and sedimentary rocks are jumbled and tumbled all around. A 
series  of epic geological uplifts had transformed this place in less 
than 35 million years.  In geologic terms, just a blink of the eye 
separates us in time from the last  Titanothere.
 
Back on the road, the switchbacks are numerous, the terrain is steep and
 corners  are tight. In some places, you cannot see where your wheels 
will land, so most  drivers hug the inside radius of the turns. As a 
result, there are deep  ruts
 cut along the inner track of some corners. If your vehicle’s suspension
 survives  the first unexpected hit, it is prudent to slow to a crawl on
 the many  gouged-out turns to follow.
ruts
 cut along the inner track of some corners. If your vehicle’s suspension
 survives  the first unexpected hit, it is prudent to slow to a crawl on
 the many  gouged-out turns to follow.
 
According to most publications and the Death Valley Visitor’s Center, 
any  “high-clearance vehicle” should be able to negotiate the Titus 
Canyon Road. What  they do not tell you is that this can be a grueling 
trip for a novice driver or  if you are in a marginal vehicle. 
Authorities should designate this as a “Rough Road”,  with a strong 
suggestion toward four-wheel drive capability. Because of both  
weathering and its popularity, the Titanothere Canyon section of the 
road is  rapidly deteriorating. If your vehicle is questionable, I 
suggest renting  a Jeep Wrangler four-wheel drive vehicle in Death Valley. This road begs for  a “locked and loaded” Jeep Wrangler, and nothing less.
 
About
 thirteen miles into the drive, within Titanothere Canyon, sweeping 
views  and steep drop-offs will vie for the driver’s attention. If a 
drop-off wins, you  and your passengers will die, so keep your hands on 
the wheel, your eyes upon  the road and slow down. If you survive the 
switchbacks of Titanothere Canyon,  your reward will be in the cresting 
the summit at  Red Pass.
 The first-time visitor is encouraged to stop and look back at the  
perilous climb just completed. You might ask yourself, “If that was the 
first  half of the road, what more could it possibly have to offer”?
 
Then, if you turn and look toward where your wheels are about to take 
you, you  will encounter an astounding view. On my visit, I stood agape 
as the afternoon  sun illuminated a landscape that fell away toward a 
darkening canyon. Looking  down, I could see something flickering on the
 dirt road, far below. After a few  moments, I realized that the tiny 
objects attracting my attention were the three  motorcycle riders I had 
met earlier, near the beginning of the road. The Robert  Frost inside 
me, blurted out, “I have  miles to go before I sleep”.
 
The
 more famous Titus Canyon (to follow) has an equally ominous history. 
The  name honors Morris Titus, who, in 1906, left nearby Rhyolite with a
 prospecting party.  When water ran short, Titus struck out on his own 
to find more, but never  returned to the party. It is an historical tale
 repeated anew several times each  year in Death Valley National Park.
 
The usual scenario includes a solo hiker taking off for a jaunt in the 
desert.  Water soon runs out and the hiker tries to make it back to 
civilization before  succumbing to heat and dehydration. Sometimes the 
hiker lives to tell the tale,  but many others rapidly succumb, to be 
found as  buzzard bait
 by a later search party. The lesson is to never hike alone,  avoid the 
midday sun and take more water than you could ever need. Consider  
wearing a hydration pack, since a small bottle of water is insufficient.
 
While humming the lyrics to the  rock group America’s,
 “I went through the desert on a horse with no name”, I  drank from my 
ample water supply. Then, I headed down into the darkening  recesses of 
the  Grapevine Mountains and Titus Canyon. Soon, I came to the ruins  of Leadfield.
 It is a former mining town built on the concept that there are  
hundreds, if not thousands of people willing to bet their lives and 
fortunes on  an unproven mining claim. During the years 1925 and 1926, 
many fortune seekers  succumbed to false advertising and moved to 
Leadfield. The only lead in Leadfield was used to salt the fake mine 
tunneled by the town's developer. By February 1927, the post office 
closed and the town  shut down. Only an ersatz tailings pile and the 
remnants of a few buildings  remain.
 
As the afternoon wore on, high canyon walls often shaded my truck. Since
 the  road often faced west, I did experience more sunlight than I 
expected. As it  descended, the road followed the dry streambed within 
Titus Canyon. Other than  while dodging various rock outcroppings, the 
road seemed permanent enough to  travel a bit faster. Then, without 
warning, I hit a patch of road with standing  water and hidden potholes.
 Some were so deep, they could bend the suspension on  any vehicle. That
 surfacing stream, near Klare Spring, was the only sign of water that I 
saw on the entire transit.
 
As
 I splashed over the watery moonscape of a road, I came across a young 
woman,  hiking in the opposite direction, up Red Pass. She wore a light 
parka and a  small daypack. Her ruddy face was the color of someone who 
had spent many days  outdoors. I had only enough time to hit the brakes 
and apologize for splashing  water toward her. Then, she was gone. 
Immediately, I wondered where she was  going and how she would survive 
in the cold night to come. Did she make it out alive, from the canyon 
where Morris Titus met his demise?
 
In places, the road cuts through a canyon so steep and  narrow, it 
measures less than twenty feet, from wall to wall. Elsewhere, the canyon
  broadens out, lining the edges of the road with the rock and boulder 
remnants of  past floods. A  satellite view
 of the area reveals that it has seen eons of erosion, cutting  deeply 
into ancient volcanic flows. Such a bird’s eye view also reveals that  
miles of roadway could easily disappear in a single large flood.
 
At
 one point, the sun disappeared behind a small peak, as viewed from the 
road.  Not knowing if I was going to see the sun again before the end of
 the road, I  stopped, backed up and observed the sun as it set again 
behind the same peak. As  it did, I snapped a picture of the sunlight, 
attenuated by its headlong dip  behind the peak. The resulting photo 
accompanies this article.
 
When people take pictures of a bright light source, and especially the 
sun, the  orbs and crescents of light, which the camera captures, we 
calls “lens flares”.  That tag is an easy way to explain an otherwise 
inexplicable phenomenon. How can  a camera divide sunlight into discreet
 elements of different colors, each with  its own apparent mass and 
velocity? My theory is that the camera is capturing in  one frame, 
several different aspects of a  fragmenting cosmic ray. As a single ray approaches ground level, its plasma flow may change from a translucent green orb to a green crescent and finally into a  red-orange disk, oblate in shape.
 
There are two sources of cosmic rays on Earth. Some, like the one I photographed,  emanate directly from the Sun. Other,  higher energy cosmic rays, come to Earth from deep space. As we currently  approach the  Grand Solar Minimum,
 the sun still emits cosmic rays toward Earth. As the Earth’s 
magnetosphere simultaneously erodes toward its lowest level in one  
thousand years, ground-penetrating cosmic rays are free to hit the Earth
 with  greater frequency and force. Since a single, fragmenting cosmic 
ray can penetrate the Earth  and possibly exit our planet on the 
opposite side, they are a force of energy  for all life to respect.
 
As the cosmic rays increase in both frequency and strength, they heat up fracture zones, transform-faults and volcanic fissures all over our Earth.  The result, as we have recently seen in the  Great Rift Valley
 of Africa and many other areas on the globe, is expansion  and 
uplifting of the Earth’s crust. Similar forces may have turned the 
benign  plateaus and plains roamed by the ancient Titanothere into this,
 one of the most  dramatic geological regions on Earth.
 
Near
 the end of Red Pass, in Titus Canyon, I again encountered the three  
motorcyclists I had previously seen along the road. They had parked 
their  motorcycles at the edge of the road and now lay reclined against a
 canyon wall,  enjoying the shade of late afternoon. The road had been a
 test of my own stamina  and concentration, so I could only image how 
tired they were after running all of Titus Canyon Road.
 
At the  lower end of Titus Canyon,
 the watercourse dumps out its alluvium into the  upper reaches of Death
 Valley. From there, as the sun headed toward the horizon,  I safely 
made my way back to civilization and to my campsite at Furnace Creek,  
in Death Valley National Park.
                 
By James McGillis at 05:01 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link


 
