In my previous post I showed you the Salton Sea mud volcanoes, which are ULTRA cool. (YOU should go there. REALLY!)
I also knew there was another, similar mud-active field in the area, but it took me a while to find it (especially since I was approaching it from the wrong direction and didn’t have my copy of the directions with me).
I eventually got there and discovered that, unlike the previous field I visited, it didn’t have any mud volcanoes. (AWWW!)
It did, however, have GIANT mudpots. (WOO-HOO!)
In fact, the main mudpots were so large that they’d built a fence around them with a viewing platform.
I took this photo from a distance, over the fence. But you’ll notice in the picture below that one slat in the fence is missing . . .
I mean, that’s just an OPEN INVITATION, soooooo . . .
Here’s a picture down the gullet of the closest giant mudpot:
It’s BIG–so big that it can’t all fit in my camera frame when I’m standing on its edge (sorry for the lack of scale). It’s easily big enough for a man (or several men at once) to fall down it if they were to do something Y-chromosomy like go through the gap in the fence and stand right on its edge, but there’s not a lot of muddy, bubbly activity down there at the moment.
There’s also some interesting texture on the ground, like these mud fault lines between the giant mudpots.
I was particularly intruigued by this, which is a fractured green rock. Why is it green? How did it get factured? What forces was it subject to that could fracture it in the midst of this sea of soft mud?
I’ll probably never know this side of heaven.
But here’s the gullet of the other giant mudpot that’s inside the fence. It actually DOES have some bubbly, muddy activity down at the bottom (as well as some timbers–possibly including one stripped from the fence by some Y-chromosome vandals in the not too distant past)–but it’s so far down that you can’t really see the activity in the pictures I took.
MORE ON MUDPOTS. (Including how to get to them and the mud volcanoes at the Salton Sea.)
So: Giant mudpots. . . . Cool, but not nearly as cool as the mud volcanoes.
Still . . . a rewarding trip to the obsidian and pumice-butted, mud volcanoed, giant mudpotted, giant, radioactive snail monster-infested, foul-smelling Salton Sea!
Um, yeah. Big pots of mud. Is mud interesting? My instincts tell me “no,” but Jimmy Akin tells me “yes.” I guess I have to go with Jimmy, he’s been right too many times before.
Today mudpots tomorrow the Big One. Do you have an escape route? :))
Pretty neat to see where Jimmy is on Google Earth. Search on El Centro CA and then use the following lat-lon coordinates to find Obsidian Butte 33 10 16 DegMinSec North and 115 38 15 DegMinSec West. I had to use the USGS map server to find the coordinates for the butte. You have to scroll around a bit in Google Earth. Didn’t see Jimmy’s truck, tho
If it weren’t against some law, I would like to have seen you throw something into the mudpot to see if it would injest it or melt it (like maybe a marshmallow or a beetle).
I’m not TOO interested in mudpots, but Jimmy’s interest in mudpots is itself somewhat interesting to me.
Probably some sulpher-based sediments such as on Mars, with extremophile algae growing inside.
(The greenish rock)
Are the mud pots really worm holes? Because today is Dec. 16th not Dec. 9th.