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Glimpses of our National Monuments

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  • wcu_great_smoky_mtns-10660.jpg
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  • OUR NATIONAL MONUMENTS 5 the staff of the American Museum of Natural History, is the custodian of the monument, and in charge of the excavation. CAPULIN MOUNTAIN NATIONAL MONUMENT Capulin Mountain, N. Mex., is a magnificent example of a recently extinct volcano. Rising to an altitude of about 8,000 feet above sea level, it stands 1,500 feet above the general level of the surrounding plain. It is a steep-sided, circular cinder cone having a well- marked crater at its summit, with a broad platform at its base built up by successive flows of lava. The mountain is about a mile and a half in diameter at its base. The diameter of the crater from rim to rim is about 1,500 feet and its bottom is about 75 feet below the lowest part of the rim and 275 feet lower than the highest point. Capulin Mountain Capulin Mountain is situated in the center of a volcanic region whose western extremity is about 50 miles east of the Rocky Mountains and which extends easterly from Raton Pass on the Santa Fe Trail through southern Colorado and northeastern New Mexico into Oklahoma, a distance of more than 80 miles. Evidence of the tremendous volcanic activity that occurred in this section is to-day disclosed in the mesas built up by layers of successive lava flows of varying thicknesses, separated by long periods of time, and now exposed through the action of erosion. Great cracks in the earth through which the molten rock poured forth are exposed in the eroded areas as dikes of solidified lava. In some places where the lava welled up through relatively small pipes the hardened filling now protrudes from the surface as " plugs," the softer rock around them having been eroded away. In other places the lava issued through vents and mountains
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).