On
7 February 2015 David Beach led nineteen Skyliners on a tour of three
sinkholes in the Loy Butte area. These included the smallest and
also the largest of seven Sedona area sinkholes.
From
Cottonwood Safeway parking lot, we drove north on Hwy 89A for 9.6
miles and turned left onto Forest road 525 at the Sedona Wastewater
treatment facility. We drove 5.9 miles on FR 525, turned right onto
FR 152C, drove 2.0 miles and turned left onto FR 152E. We then
continued for another 0.4 miles and parked at the rim of Sinkhole
4543.
With
a circumference of 13 feet and a depth of around 3 feet, this is the
smallest of the Sedona area sinkholes. The name “4543,” taken
from the elevation at the site, was assigned by Paul A. Lindberg,
author of Arizona Geological Survey, Contributed Report CR-10-C,
April 2010.1
The author says that it is a “sinkhole that is probably in the
formative stage of breaking through to the modern ground surface.”
He goes on to note reports of substantial amounts of air rushing in
and out of two small rock openings at the site, indicating a large
cavity below ground level.
Dave Beach standing in 4543 Sinkhole
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We didn't spend much
time at 4543 and were soon on our way to Red Canyon Sinkhole, near
the Palatki Heritage archaeological site. According to Lindberg, Red
Canyon, with an estimated area of around 32,900 feet and a depth of
103 feet, is the largest of the seven Sedona area sinkholes.2
The sinkhole is actually located in the canyon and forms a part of
the canyon wall. We hiked first to the upper rim and looked down
into the sinkhole and the canyon. In the photograph below the bottom
of the sinkhole is located directly below the red outcropping and
extends back beyond where the photographer is standing. The opposite
side of the sinkhole is essentially at the canyon floor. The hiker
seen on the rim at top right is headed down into the canyon after
which he will circle back and descend to the bottom of the sinkhole.
Red Canyon Sinkhole as seen from the rim above. The other side of the sinkhole is much lower, essentially at the floor of the canyon
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After
viewing the area from the upper rim we followed the hiker shown in
the above photograph and descended (right)
to the canyon floor. We then turned and climbed down just a few feet
to reach the bottom of the sinkhole. The sinkhole accepts drainage
from Red Canyon and feeds it to a subsurface aquifer.
Tucked
in at the bottom of the sheer rock wall from which we had just
descended was a mini ecosystem, with lush grass, vines and a variety
of trees. This was indeed a most restful and isolated spot. It
would be a wonderful spot for a summer picnic. Of course picnicking
here would likely be frowned upon by the rangers at nearby Palatki.
Lush growth at the bottom of the sinkhole
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According
to Lindberg, the stream that drains Red Canyon originally bypassed
the sinkhole, but a “flash flood … created a natural debris
flow levee that … changed the course of the drainage” so that
it now “empties directly into the sinkhole.”3
The drain is shown in the photograph (left).
We
looked for pictographs that we were told could be found on the cliff
wall. We did find some, but the sun was at a poor angle for
photography and I was unable to even see them clearly, much less take
photographs. Presented below is the best shot I could get. Someone
interpreted the faint figure in the lower left of the photo as a
brave sneaking up on the animals shown in a canyon at the upper
right. That was a better explanation than any I have.
Pictographs on the cliff wall at Red Canyon Sinkhole
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Leaving
Red Canyon behind we hiked back to our cars, paused for a snack break
and then headed for Nolan Draw Sinkhole, our third and final stop.
To get there we returned to the junction of FR 525 and FR 795, drove
0.6 miles north on FR 525, turned left onto FR 9549B and continued
for one mile, heading southwest, before parking on the right side of
the road. After parking we hiked another 100 yards on FR 9549B,
turned left through a stile and followed an old road for about 0.4
miles to our destination. I don't know for sure what old road we
were following, but we did come to a fork with a sign identifying the
left fork as FR 9549C; we took the right fork.
Nolan
Draw Sinkhole was to me the most interesting of the three we visited
today. It actually had what I expected of a decent sinkhole: steep,
sharply deliniated walls, a decent depth, some secretive dark places
below and trees growing in the bottom. It was the sort of place
where monsters might lurk, waiting for small children to fall in.
Nolan Draw Sinkhole
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The
diameter of Nolan Draw Sinkhole is more than 1830 square feet and it
is some 68 feet deep. It also has an undercut area running from the
northwest through the north, the east and on to the southeast side.
Lindberg reports that “the undercut area is 4.6 times larger
than the surface opening with a large dirt floor extending to the
northeast.”4
Dave,
our hike leader, was determined to descend into the hole and explore
the area of the overhang and I had packed my flashlight. Lila had
contributed a rope lest we be unable to haul ourselves back up. We
quickly shed our packs and started the descent, Dave taking the lead.
There was a narrow shelf, just wide enough to stand on, about six
feet below the rim and just below the shelf was a sturdy tree trunk
that we could use to shinny down to what Lindberg called a
“human-formed bench”5
In the below photograph, taken by the author while standing on the
narrow ledge, Dave is shown below sliding down the tree trunk.
Dave Beach descending into the Nolan Draw Sinkhole
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We
explored the overhang from the southeast to the northwest. Dave is
shown below standing on the dirt floor underneath the overhang; this
photograph was taken from the human-formed bench.
Standing under the overhang
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We
continued our counterclockwise exploration of the overhang by
crouching and heading for the light at the end of the tunnel so to
speak. Rocks had broken off the walls above and tumbled to the
bottom (right), partially closing
off the overhang and creating a tunnel. The brilliant rays of the
midday sun, shining down through openings in the fallen rock debris,
lit up the darkness under the overhang and made the going easy.
Encouraged
by the easy travel, I pushed on toward the northwest end of the
overhang, soon finding the exit (left).
I
emerged from beneath the overhang through a hole in the rubble to
find myself just at the base of the tree we had used for our descent.
Looking up through the bare branches of the tree, I could see two
hikers, framed against a clear blue sky, standing at the rim above
the sheer red wall of the sinkhole.
Hikers framed against the sky on the rim of Nolan Draw Sinkhole
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We
had now finished our exploration and after a final look around at a
recently-used fire pit and several bird nests, tucked neatly into
crevices, we climbed out to join the rest of the group for lunch.
Fire pit in Nolan Draw Sinkhole |
One of several bird nests
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From
our lunch spot on the rim of Nolan Draw Sinkhole we had an excellent view of Bear Mountain on the
horizon. The mouth of Red Canyon can be seen at the southwest corner of the mountain.
Bear
Mountain on the horizon – from the south rim of Nolan Draw Sinkhole
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After
lunch we gathered on the rim of the sinkhole for a group photograph.
Today's
hike really didn't involve much actual hiking. We bushwhacked
approximately 0.7 miles to and from Red Canyon Sinkhole and hiked
along an old road for about 0.8 miles to and from Nolan Draw
Sinkhole.
The
GPS tracks shown on the included map (next page)
in blue are forest roads we drove on. The red track shows the hike
to Nolan Draw Sinkhole. The bushwhacking track to Red Canyon
Sinkhole is not shown.
Footnote:
Ironically, the same day we visited these three of the “seven”
Sedona area sinkholes, an eighth one appeared in the roadbed of Hwy
89A, causing a road closure “between mileposts 387 – 389 near
Cave Springs Campground6”,
in the Oak Creek Canyon.
1http://www.azgs.az.gov/publications_online/contributed_reports/cr10c.pdf,
p 51
2http://www.azgs.az.gov/publications_online/contributed_reports/cr10c.pdf,
p 45
3http://www.azgs.az.gov/publications_online/contributed_reports/cr10c.pdf,
p 45
4http://www.azgs.az.gov/publications_online/contributed_reports/cr10c.pdf,
p 43
5Ibid
6http://azdailysun.com/sinkhole-closes-highway-a-in-oak-creek-canyon/article_8f1e8880-af36-11e4-b926-0f19abb4a666.html
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