Photographer’s Note
These dead and dying trees on the south side of Mammoth Mountain volcano by Horseshoe Lake in eastern California were first noticed in 1990. Since then, about 170 acres of trees have died. When the area was examined in 1990, exceptionally high concentrations of carbon dioxide gas were found in the soil beneath the trees. What caused such high concentrations of carbon dioxide gas? The most likely sources of the carbon dioxide are (1) magma that intruded beneath Mammoth Mountain during an earthquake swarm in 1989; and (2) limestone-rich rocks surrounding the intrusion (CO2 is released from limestone (CaCO3) when heated)
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Mondaychild
(1513) 2006-10-18 10:58
Hi Steve,
a beautiful and well composed photo of a not so friendly place ... I like your colors, they look rather "cold" - even the blue of the sky seems rather mystical.
Everything is dead in there, even the sun is afraid of this place and hiding behind the clouds ...
Your photo tells a story! Very well done, we - the viewers - feel the situation! Also your comment is useful!
Photo Information
- Copyright: Steve Stillman (sms) (46)
- Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2006-10-05
- Categories: Nature
- Exposure: f/3.4, 1/250 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Theme(s): Fields, Mondaychild´s favorites 2006 [view contributor(s)]
- Date Submitted: 2006-10-18 10:47
- Favorites: 1 [view]








