Summary of Geological hikes and observations- 2004
During 2004, the hiking group reviewed the findings made during previous years; this should be reviewed, before reading the later abstracts.
2003 Summary
FAULTING
(see attachment on the website):
The
Baby Island- Ledgewood- Admiralty Head fault is our most certain fault. It runs
NW-SE, and can be seen and sampled just off the
I
believe that the fault is still active, based on the road breakage and
slumping at Ledgewood; but there is only one concrete slab indication that it is left-lateral, and the
main observations support the conclusion that it is compressive and causing
uplift at selected locations like Admiralty Head (it could still be left
lateral).
Other
faulting on the main body of
The
fault which has been most studied by our group is actually two faults or more,
surrounding the Rocky Point exposure. There is a lesser observed fault on the
north side of R.P., and the greenstones and metasediments are being
dragged between these two movements. The fault runs about 130 degrees from
north, and has been exhumed by the USGS in a trench for measurement. It has a
displacement of the main fault trace, to the north as shown by LIDAR, of
about 330 feet- which would indicate that it is being sheared north-south at
about 1 cm/year (since is it is seen in glacial till of less than 15,000 years
age). Both of these faults surrounding the Rocky Point continue on to the SE,
showing up in asphalt breakage near the Naval Commissary, in the formation of
Tombolos or fossil tombolos at Polnell Point and at the seaplane base south of
the commissary. The Rocky Point exposure is uplifted in the middle causing
fracturing- the greenstones appear to be detached from their original bedrock,
since one end protrudes in the air and the other end is parallel to the
faulting direction.
There
is a general tendency for the faulting to become more eastward in expression as
the faults are explored on the north end of the island. The Silver Lake and
Creek run about 110 degrees from north, as does the El Capitan fault- compared
to the SW-NE faulting at Baby Island and at SW Maxwelton Creek (toward upper
Cultus Bay). This hints that the NW-SE fault trend is the result of the interference
of the Pacific Plate moving northward relative to the North American plate
running westward. The vector resolution of two stresses running perpendicular
to each other is a diagonal between them, with exaggerated importance of
each stress direction as the main thrust becomes nearer to
the fault being observed. This diagonal trend would be the case
when each stress is of similar effect (magnitude). However, the Pacific plate
main thrust is west of the San Juan de Fuca expression, and there are spreading
zones west of the
The
only significant evidence of N-S
thrusting due to occasional Pac. Plate lurching is that of the displacement of
the Rocky Point fault as noticed by LIDAR. There are several N-S fractures
which could add weight, including the one on the seaplane base Tombolo,
and to the fractures which die out looking upward on the cliffs (as
opposed to glacial-induced fractures which die out with depth).
My
tentative conclusion about all this is that the N-S fractures are just now
being formed, as the JdF plate moves under the continent and dies out (not
yet), while the Pacific plate is getting closer to W.I. and beginning
to assert itself.
FRACTURING
(see 2nd attachment, in website):
Fractures
may be seen at many orientations and locations in the cliffs, so that one
cannot use them for specifics; however, the pattern which they make when
seen for multiple entities is useful for determining the regional
stresses causing them. For example, at
Fractures
may be seen to be related to Alkalinity in the wells which are near significant
fractures (see attachment 3). This is the case with
H2CO3
(carbonic acid in rain) + CaCO3 (calcareous cement in sediments)-> 2HCO3 + dissolved Ca++.
Consequently,
when recent fractures are created by stresses in the earth (extensional), rain
will increase the HCO3 in nearby water wells, and will give a signal that
fractures and loose sediments are building up water pressure. This would be
accompanied by a rise in water table, providing there is not excessive usage of
well water. A result of this could be slumping, which causes large amounts
of earth to spall off cliffs, lubricated by the rapid increase of
subsurface water. Since this is the case with hiker Cronk's water well, we will
use him as a test case to see how long this signal occurs before a new
slump happens. The south coast has a history of 33 years/slump (somewhere, not
necessarily in the same place repeatedly), so Don has a respite of up to
33 years before he loses his back lot.
Here
is the almost final rendition of our Geological group's fight song- I can
visualize it in my mind's eye, all of you skipping along the beach, in single
file, doing a pirouette occasionally, belting out this tune with the bravado of
a Gilbert & Sullivan chorus line. Go to it, earthy ones, let out your
emotions in a vigorous burst of song:
Whit-Be-allovous
(to the cadence of Sullivan’s “A Modern Major General”)
A Fight Song
We
trod the beaches of the land, with footprints so magnificent,
We take good care and prudence, since we’re
seemingly significant;
We
are geological, with thoughts so ecological-
We solve the island’s many myths, with
motives almost nearly always logical.
We
step o’er rock and fragile stone, with boundless love resilient,
Our thoughts, forever prime, are always
bordering on the brilliant-
We
zig and zag, it’s in the bag, the secrets of a stratigraphic crag,
Our yards are always full of Nature’s
bounteous anticlinal swag.
Whew!
We
look at cave and cliff, for clues that often are mysterious,
We form our explanations, which then
sometimes are delirious;
We’re
ever right, with thoughts so bright, the clays we test with subtle bite,
The Mastodons we lately seek,
are almost always out of sight.
We
sniff the waters of the seeps, which are mostly full of Carbonate,
We draw straight lines on maps, over which we
then can fulminate-
We
look not for the animal, not vegetable, but mineral,
We seek to find the local sense of Earthy
Science-in-General.
We
find the island’s many faults are certainly near left-lateral
The moraines make Points, but Heads
(Tombolos) are quaintly mostly platter-al,
We
are Geological, with thoughts so ecological-
We solve the islands many myths, with motives
almost nearly always logical.
Our
rare scientific group is most certainly gregarious;
With the exception of a stately few, they are
hardly e’er nefarious-
They
most certainly show attentiveness, to the total group’s inventiveness
They never forget a single clue, keeping
constant retentiveness.
We’re
constantly amused almost, by the manly interaction,
Of the way they stand their solid
ground, while their stomachs are in traction-
While
some will look at cuttle fish, rarely they’re rebuttal-ish,
They follow simply to a man, the leader’s
every whim and wish.
They
never waste a word or deed, showing ultimate economy;
They incorporate all useful fields, even
invertebrate Taxonomy-
They
map all Points, align all Joints,
Whenever it is possible, they listen to
whomever USGS anoints.
We
march out in the sand-filled fields, with ultimate sobriety;
Then we announce our final facts, with
tremendous notoriety;
We
use all of our abilities, with promising agilities
Before there is a final
loss of all of our facilities.
We
incorporate every certain fact, remaining ever all aghast;
With completely serious rectitude, we follow
an iconoclast!
We
are Geological, with thoughts so ecological-
We solve the islands many myths, with motives
nearly always almost logical.
Harold L. Overton
2004
findings:
Fracturing, cont’d
1. Fractures
should only be used to generalize about earth stresses- whether there are
compressive or extensional local earth stresses. A fracture, as I use it, must
be confirmed as part of a set of parallel cracks in the rock to be considered
more than a random expression of exfoliation, jointing caused by differential
thermal expansion, ancient weaknesses in the rock caused by fossil stresses,
and gravity effects (incipient slumping, recent earthquake influences, and
man-made cracks caused by blasting).
2. Fracturing
should be used for stress information, only in conjunction with other
stratigraphic or structural findings to confirm a pattern- e.g. compressive as
seen about a fold or anticline, or extensional as seen near normal faulting,
springs, and drainages.
3. Regional
Fracturing, such as found in the surface of rock outcrops, may be used to
determine local anomalies; e.g. whenever there is a well-defined regional
trend, such as SW-NE over much of the Colorado Plateau, the local departure of
parallel fractures from this orientation will indicate a local anomaly.
4. In the cliffs
of
5. A single
fracture should not be used for any specific or generalized information.
Further, fractures located vertically above others should be treated
differently from those which are parallel horizontally (at roughly the same
elevation); e.g., at the suspected location of the
FAULTING
Seismic may indicate that faulting occurs on a
straight line trace at the subsurface, but we have not found this always to be
the case at the surface.
1. At the NW-SE
fault trace proceeding from
2. At Cultus Bay,
there is an anomaly in the faulting; although the NW trace can be seen on LIDAR
and on the geographic TOPO, the perpendicular change in Cultus Bay indicates
that there are two orientations- NE-SW as well as the orthogonal Creek
orientation.
3. Lateral
faulting on W.I. is sinusoidal in expression- that is, it is compressional at
times and extensional at others. The fault expression at Baby Island, which is
undisputable, is in the nature of small hogbacks just 100 meters distant from a
normal dropping on the west side in the concrete barricade. This expression of
down drop is disputed by the local inhabitants- who have a pecuniary interest
in maintaining property values. They maintain that the down drop in the bulwark
was put in the concrete originally, ignoring the fragmentation of the boundary
concrete. However, they pointed out that there is a junction of two
separately-poured concrete sections, and indeed, when one looks at the base of
the bulwark, there is an old wooden separation junction. This uplift on one
side of the fault appears to be the case for Admiralty Head also. It is
possible that some of the suspected drop at B.I. (19 cm) is artificial, but
there are other indications of down drop on the SW side, other than the
concrete separation. There are sets of parallel fractures, which are wider at
the top, than when they occur lower in the concrete- this indicates extension
on the SW side, or settling as one approaches the concrete breakage.
4. The creek orientation
seems to be a better method of finding linear faulting than does the LIDAR.
Good examples include Silver Creek- running 110 degrees from north, S. Max
Creek, running mostly NW-SE, the small drainage north of Loganberry Farm,
running NW-SE, and the NW-SE drainage north of
5. Ιgnore creeks or drainages running N-S, since these
are expressions created by the scouring
and carving made by the dominant glacial movements. Only when drainage crosses
the N-S scrapings, can it be considered as happening since the glacier period.
ALKALINITY
MAPPING
The
extensional fracturing can be considered to have opened the earth to faster
penetration of rainwater. According to the relation:
H2CO3
(carbonic acid in rainwater) + CaCO3 (limy cement)>2 HCO3 + Ca++ ion.
That
is, whenever slightly acidic rainfall (regardless whether man has instigated it
or not) falls on the ground, where it is easier to penetrate new fractures, the
end product is increased alkalinity of the ground water.
This is shown on a map of the south end of the
island (see the alkalinity geochemical map on the website), where
Past history has documented slumps occurring
in large amounts on the south end of the island, some as large as 10 acres at a
whack. This would be expected to have been caused by the SW-erly storms, which
exaggerate erosion. However, the fact that the slumping occurs on the SE coast
more than on the SW coast at Scatchet Head, and that the faulting is peculiar there
indicates something more than storms.
The slumping, which was predicted to occur on
one of the hiking member’s lot, was not predicted in terms of time, but in
space; this rate is unknown, since the scanty data used to predict the slumping
was only 4 occurrences in a century. This suggests a rate of occurrence of
something like once every 1/3 century. The hiker’s lot experienced slumping
within 6 months of the prediction and now his neighbor has slumping also. The
water well chemical analysis used to make this prediction was based on the
occurrence of excessive K/Cl and alkalinity/Cl, in a well used only by the lot
owner. There was no history of measuring alkalinity/Cl over a time interval, so
that the buildup of HCO3 with time is unknown.
The extensive peat layer was used to
understand the structure and stratigraphy at Scatchet Head and
1. Scatchet Head
is not only recent, and a faulting compressional anomaly, but has an incipient
anomaly running perpendicular to the main faulting.
2. The slumping
is being exaggerated by fractures running perpendicular to the main trend, and
is preferentially spalling off in a NE-SW direction.
3. Effort should
be made to determine the nature of this NE-SW extensional anomaly, since this
is seen nowhere else on the island. However, Polnell Point, Bush Point, and
Maylor Point- Seaplane base are compressional anomalies (bulges) running NE-SW
also.
Geochemical
Mapping and Seawater Intrusion
There
is a valuable store of water well and chemical analyses available in the Island
County Health Department files; this has been accumulated and organized by a
hydro-geologist, and is reflected in the previous maps and analyses for
faulting and anomalies. Since the wells are mostly drilled to similar depths,
and reflect meteoric water which has been influenced by glacial sediments
mainly (before the advent of man), this is an invaluable source of data for
geochemical analyses.
Geologists are likely to ignore anomalies which are vertically oriented,
particularly when they are trained in conventional stratigraphy- which states
that fluid paths for water and oil are dominantly lateral.
It is my experience that fluid paths are mainly vertical for the long term-
that is for times longer than a man’s life.
The
fact that oil has been found around vertical salt domes, vertical flexures in
the earth, near vertical paths such as large normal and thrust faults, and even in vertically-oriented dikes and
protrusions gives strong hinting that vertical paths are the preferred
locations for vertical fluid movement for these anomalous areas.
Water may be moving laterally in normal areas,
but for anomalous areas it can be suspected to move otherwise. This is the case
for geochemically abnormal zones. It has already been shown for W.I. that
faulting can be located by using abnormal fluoride and potassium concentrations.
These ions are normally measured in well water, and found to be < .2 ppm for
F and < .2 for K/Cl, whenever conditions are normal. Both of these ions are
very mobile, because of their small hydrated ion size and valence of +or- 1. In
the earth, ions tend to move in the direction of decreasing concentration,
opposite to water, which moves not only vertically downward due its heavier
weight than vapors in the soil, but toward increasing salinity due to the
osmotic effect.
The saltwater intrusion problem may be better
understood, if it is admitted in advance that it is better treated as a
geochemical entity. If one is determined to make a classification, rather than
an analysis, then the use of stiff diagrams and Pacific Island Ghyben-Hertzberg
portrayal (hand-waving in the case of Whidbey, due to the many separate cells
created by the 9 or more significant faults crossing the island) is as far as
one can go. However, the use of mathematical treatment of the variation of
ionic concentrations will admit much more.
To use geochemical mapping, one must look at
the assumptions, which are inherent in the use of ionic concentrations:
1. For a
particular region, such as
2. Volcanoes
belch acidic waters, which may be hydrochloric, sulfuric, or hydrofluoric
(among others). Consequently, one may use anomalous F, K, or SO4 as reaction
products from the acids. The presence of NaCl, CaSO4, & F is derived from
the acids reacting with host rock, in these cases, e.g.
HCl + sodium, oxides in rock > H2O + NaCl
This shows how ocean water increased in both
salinity and volume, through geologic time, by vulcanism. However, if one uses
molal balances to determine the sea water salinity, one finds that the water
would be much more saline than now exists, if vulcanism were the only method
for dissolving salts in the ocean.
Only F
from vulcanism is valuable for anomaly location, since Na and Ca are common in
ground water, with wide variations. However, K from igneous rocks (orthoclase,
later illite, and K-clays) is a good indicator, due to its small hydrated ionic
size, large solubility, and simple valence.
3. The upward
movement of components dissolved in water, due partly to their increased
solubility in thermal waters, is in no way an indication of the movement of the
water host. Ions will move in the direction of decreasing concentration, even
the reverse to the direction of the liquid phase. However, the mechanical
movement of water (hydraulic-pressure induced) will overwhelm the tendency of
ions to move against the stream. Only if the water is stationary will the ionic
movement be noticeable. Diffusion is extremely slow, but osmotic changes are
relatively rapid. I have witnessed the changes in groundwater around a well
bore as oil is produced in a short (less than a year) time, when there were
strong pressure changes A way of estimating the mobility of ions is to measure
the ionic potential- Z/r (atomic charge/un-hydrated size); this is a measure of
the hydrating ability of an ion (attraction to water- which is attracted to the
ion, but is restricted to being incorporated about the available surface area).
Table
I: Ionic Potential of Ions, Z/r (valence/non-hydrated radius)
|
Ion |
Z/r |
(MW)2/3 |
A#Na/Ai |
Ion |
Z/r |
(MW)2/3 |
A#ref/Ai |
|
Cs+ |
.6 |
(133)*=26 |
11/55=.2 |
Ca++ |
2.0 |
(40)n=12 |
11/20=.55 |
|
K |
.75 |
(39)n=12 |
11/19=.58 |
Mn++ |
2.5 |
(54.9)=14 |
11/25=.44 |
|
Na |
1.0 |
(23)*=
7.8 |
11/11=1.0 |
Fe++ |
2.7 |
(55.8)*=15 |
11/26=.42 |
|
Li |
1.5 |
(6.9)*=3.6 |
11/3
=3.7 |
Mg |
3.0 |
(24.3)*=2.9 |
11/12=.91 |
|
Ba++ |
1.5 |
|
|
Fe+++ |
4.7 |
|
|
Table ΙΙ. Μesasured ionic radius, Angstroms
Correlate this with the surface area of un-hydrated
ions: proportional to (cube root of molecular weight) squared.
|
Ion |
r,10-10
m |
Valence/r V(reciprocal
of radius,A) |
Ion |
R,10-10
m |
v/r |
|
Cs+ |
1.67 |
.6 |
Ca++
|
1.0 |
2.0 |
|
K |
1.3 |
.75 |
Mn |
.8 |
2.5 |
|
Na |
1.0 |
1.0 |
Fe++
|
.7 |
2.7 |
|
Li |
.65 |
1.5 |
Mg |
.67 |
3.0 |
|
Ba++ |
1.35 |
1.5 |
Fe+++ |
.7 |
4.7 |
This
is from Mason: Principles of Geochemistry, where I have correlated atomic
weight and separately the surface area of the ion with radius (Ca has about
twice the number of protons as Na). The hydration of ions, which is partly
determined by the ionic potential, is high whenever the ratio is high, so that
Ca and Mg move with difficulty through the fractures in rock, whereas Cs, K,
and Na move easily (hydration or incorporation of water about the ion makes the
overall size of the ion larger). Notice
that K has a larger atomic number (19), compared to Na (11), and this is
primarily the reason why its ionic size before hydration is larger. The charge
density of Na is larger however, since the charges are spread over a smaller
area, hence the hydrated size is larger (charge density is larger), and it
hydrates with dipolar water more than with K. One may reflect how KCl is
prescribed for heart patients, rather than ordinary salt, because Na hydrates
more than K, and causes an incorporation of water in the human body. A map on
Cs would be the best map for tracing anomalous water contents, but this is
rarely measured. Lithium and arsenic are good indicators of warm water movements,
whereas fluoride and potassium are mobile at any temperature. K & F ions
are more available, similarly to Li & As, whenever thermal waters introduce
them from depth either from the weathering or dissolution of granites.
Analysis of the Seawater Intrusion Problem
1. Before man
begins to pump water from a well bore, the water and its contents are in a
state of near-equilibrium with surrounding rock. The original water should be
measured for its contents, to find whether there has been movement of ocean
water into the zone which is to be produced.
2. Since both Na
and Cl are dominant in seawater, and they are very mobile, the ratio should be
calculated for the original water (chloride is essentially non-reactive with
whatever the rock has to offer, hence is an excellent reference- to offset
dilution, concentration or other errors of measurement). This ratio is .55 for
ocean water, and widely varying for rivers, since the dominant ions are Ca and
Mg in fresh water, reflecting the rock over which the streams drain.
3. The likely
circumstance for well water is that water will be hard- that is the cement
holding the rock together is being dissolved under the influence of
downwardly-moving meteoric waters (acidic). Volcanic areas will yield softer
waters, as will dominantly silicate rocks. Man prefers to drink water which has
some mineralization- about 200 ppm, but not over 1000.
4. If the
anomalous water is found to be soft with a ratio near .55 for Na/Cl, then the sea
is already exerting its influence. However, if it is found that K/Cl is >
.2, or F is greater than .2 (using consistent weight units), abnormal salinity
can be suspected as being fault-influenced. Abnormal K or F would be treated
differently than the case for simple seawater intrusion.
5. Faults
connected with the ocean will allow ocean water to move toward the well,
whenever the pressure is reduced by pumping- if the well is near the shoreline
and contents are marginal, the well should be abandoned.
6. Whenever a
well near the shoreline produces water which has anomalous contents (> 500
ppm), the ratio of Ca/Cl should be calculated. Seawater contains only about
1/10 of the tds (total dissolved solids) as Ca+Mg/Cl, so for those compounds in
excess of about 50ppm Ca+Mg with Na and Cl low, the water is not seawater.
River water has influenced groundwater, in this case, containing dominantly
hard components. Glacial sediments, such as those in old streams from melting
ice, will have excessive Ca+Mg compared to Na.
7. Anomalous
water, or that having tds> 500 ppm, is likely vertically-moved water, if it
has an excess of K, SO4, HCO3, F, or other strange ions. The presence of SO4,
since this ion does not move across formation boundaries, is an indicator of
large fractures, faulting or chemical reactions occurring locally. Peat beds,
iron compounds, and evaporative sediments would be sources of this compound.
8. When the well
is more than 2 km from the coastline, excessive K or F (faulting) will not
indicate seawater intrusion- the bitter or iron-flavored water may be tolerated,
and expected not to become much worse.
9. When the well
is excessively alkaline (bicarbonated), this produces a bubbly taste, and 1000
ppm could be tolerated. This case is not ominous, even though the salinity is
large, but it may portend slumping if the well is near the beach.
The next
worse case, compared to excessive salinity, is that of sulfate and iron. These
will stink and stain, and create unsightly water. Although seawater is high in
SO4 (>.14 for SO4/Cl), this ion does not travel easily through fractures or
faulting. It has a large charge and size, and is filtered by clays and shales.
But it is attacked by bacteria to produce the stink, particularly in water
heaters, and it has an unpleasant taste. This can be treated by filtration or
membrane (osmotic) separation. Excessive Fe or SO4 may occur around peat bogs
or mineral deposits, but is not likely an indication of seawater intrusion..
In
summation, the ratios of Na, K, Mg, Ca- all cations, (c/Cl)-
should be tabulated for both the water well and compared to that for the average
of 100 wells in the vicinity. Whenever any of these cations are excessive
compared to the regional average, this indicates an anomaly. Only excessive Na
or Cl, & Na/Cl, compared to the regional average, will indicate sea water
intrusion. Anomalous K, Ca, and Mg (in addition to boron, iron, and HCO3) will
indicate other aberrations, indicating problems of a different nature. Before
producing the well significantly, the water composition can predict behavior-
such as faulting, stinking, and other anomalies.
BAYS,
HEADS & TOMBOLOS
Admiralty Bay & Ledgewood faulting,
Useless Bay & Maxwelton faulting,
These sets of faults are dominantly moving laterally
and cause sinusoidal expression- alternate compression and extension- in their
traces along the surface, as they encounter soft or harder obstacles in their
paths. The compressive cases result in Heads- such as Admiralty, Scatchet,
Maylor Point, and Polnell Point.
An interesting case is that of Scatchet Head,
where the NW-SE fault trace can be seen on the LIDAR map. The trace runs along
lower Maxwelton Creek, and can be seen to align with the hook in
The two tombolos- Polnell and
The sequence of events leading up to a bay
development is as follows:
1. A lateral
fault causes slippage and fracturing along its trace;
2. Water enters
the fractures and openings and creates a creek as it flows downhill;
3. Eventually the
creek is connected with the sea, and tidal wash enters the creek which is at
sea level and deeper;
4. The daily
oscillations of sea water remove the loosened sediment, creating a strait or
canal;
5. Erosion is
more rapid in the banks of these straits, and a passage is created, which may
be entirely at sea level crossing the peninsula;
6. A tombolo is
created on one side and a bay is created on the other side of this passage-
eventually making an island of the peninsula;
7. When the
island is removed by erosion, a larger bay is created. This bay is somewhat
protected from the storms, and it may form spits where it connects with the
larger sea. These spits may grow sea-ward, as long as the bay is protected, in
contrast to the normal coastline on W.I.- which is retreating
with an advancing sea.
Model
based on entities observed now:
Assuming that occurrences seen on W.I. can be
used through time, although they are seen only through two-dimensional space
(cliffs), the following sequence is conjectured for a coastline development:
a. Meltwater
flowed west from the last two lobes of ice occurring above the island (observed
on LIDAR west of Freeland and Penn Cove); these two lobes, although having
moved almost at right angles to each other, can be seen to have moved over W.I.
from scratchings and scoopings in the sediments. Penn Cove is younger- having
overprinted the older
b. NW-SE faulting
continues (probably having been initiated in the Tertiary), and creates
openings toward the NW (Seattle Pacific U. swale and
c. Rebound occurs
as soon as the ice melts (losing its weight, as a surface-depressing agent),
and Admiralty Head, Maylor Point, Scatchet head, and Polnell Point rise-
uplifting the surrounding terrain. This uplift later begins to choke off the
entrances to the sea (
d. The bays are
now large enough to have connected with the salt water proper in other
directions, and they continue to enlarge with tidal wash from the west
(Admiralty and
e. The heads
continue to uplift, not just by rebound, since faulting creates compression at
some of them (Admiralty and Scatchet Heads);
f. This bay
creation can now be seen at
g. This
compression at some parts of the lateral faulting can be seen at the low tide
swale at
Dr. Harvey Kelsey has investigated this part
of W.I. and determined that the Loganberry Hill swale (across Holmes Harbor
from B.I.) is part of a NW-SE fault system, where a significant uplift occurred
about 3200 years ago, leaving the swale on the SW side of the fault. He noticed
by core sample measurements that rebound terminated about 4000 years ago or
more, and that the sea has been rising since then by about 1 mm/year. The fault
he investigated has caused one house in the
\
The Sound
My psyche, being tightly wound
Rose so sharply, without bound
When I transported it to new ground,
To Nirvana- dubbed “The Sound”.
How is this, Old Reprobate-
Have you found the long lost gate?
Did your spirit soon deflate,
In the desert- just of late?
Aren’t you most the individual- same-
Who just into the blue horizon came?
Were you afflicted, blue, or lame
Giving all the desert blame?
Now you are in the soul of it,
Not in peat beds or the pit,
But at the apex of your wit-
Ignoring “The Moving Finger having writ”.
Perchance you hear a different “Sound”
From the laughter, lately clowned,
Of the Verbalizer, who was downed
By his listeners- those who frowned.
Or perhaps the sound is music spilled
On Whales or Salmon, lately gilled;
Or with Pileated ‘peckers never stilled,
And with Ebby’s Prairie, rarely tilled.
Some say the sounds are phantom made,
As with neurotic psyches played-
Some from
Inserted into bovine flesh (by spade?).
It “sounds like” it is my spirit dear
Which came to life since I was here,
Which wove a spell upon my fear
And cast it out, in instants mere.
But no! It is the depth by sound,
Which was made, when fear most sound,
Made the boats proceed just cautious round
The shoreline, else the boats’d run aground.
To me, the Sound is water clear
With skies of blue in seasons near,
And currents swift and ships with gear-
That keep the Skipper’s wits so dear.
It is the place where eagles soar,
Where kayaks compete with tidal bore,
Where I can see the rocky “door”
Into the earth’s interior Floor-
Where massive movements cast their spell
On mere mans movements most pell-mell,
Where his Spirits likely gel
On Truth, and Wit- which lately fell;
But which brings a smile into my heart,
And pricks my center with a dart-
So penetrating that it makes me smart-
By hearing, seeing, smelling The Sound- Her Art.
Harold L. Overton