Sunday, March 21, 2010

Salton Sea To The Mud Pots and Volcanoes

After lunch we drove out to the Salton Sea, which is one of the world’s largest inland seas and lowest spot on earth at –226 ft. below sea level.

Bombay Beach is located on the east shore of the Salton Sea and, like many communities along its shores, has had to contend with rising and falling water levels. A berm now protects the west end of the town but a portion of the town beyond the berm is either sunken under water or is half-buried in mud. Bombay Beach is very near to the San Andreas Fault.

P1050481 P1050492

P1050495 DSC_0453

DSC_0460 DSC_0461

DSC_0463

As you can see from the pictures the devastation from floods and hurricanes is unbelievable. 

P1050496

Some of the houses away from the beach area have survived over the years and are pretty unique.  Many people still live in the town.

Leaving the Salton Sea we headed to the mud pots and mud volcanoes.  Not a well marked spot but we found it. 

Double, double toil and trouble fire burning, and cauldron bubble.  A few of us ended up with mud on our clothes from the bubbling. 

Mud pots and mud volcanoes are geothermal features produced when water or gas is forced upward through the soil. Mud pots can assume a variety of forms, typically being depressions or enclosed basins containing gas seeps, bubbling water or  mud. Mud pots can also be water-laden and appear as bubbling muddy water. Mud volcanoes, on the other hand, are elevated cone structures composed of accumulations of  mud extruded from a hole. They range from finger-sized to several feet across, though the largest in the Salton Sea area are about 3 feet high.

DSC_0470 DSC_0471

Mud bath anyone?  You first.  A person can pay big money for a mud bath at a spa and here it’s free. 

DSC_0476 DSC_0478 If you look in the upper right hand corner of the picture on the right you can see a mud spout shooting up.

DSC_0481  Top of a mud volcano. 

DSC_0469 DSC_0477

What a great day and all this within a hundred miles of our campsite.  More adventures to come. 

 

Bubbling mud pot Click on this link and it will take you to YouTube were I found a video of the mud pots.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Actually, it isn't the lowest poing in the world or even California. Badwater in Death Valley is 282 feet below sea level. Still, your story is interesting and entertaining.c