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Natures
version of a playground slide - Devils Slide, Morgan County, Utah
by Carl Ege
Geologic Information: Why take your kids to an ordinary
playground slide at the park, when you can go to the slide named
after the Devil himself? Unfortunately for sliders, Devils Slide
is not a real slide, but an unusual geologic feature found in northern
Utah.
Devils Slide is a classic example of how different rock layers,
depending on their composition, are affected by weathering and erosion.
Devils Slide looking from the south.
Gate in the foreground for scale.
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The sides of the slide are hard, weather-resistant limestone layers
about 40 feet high, 25 feet apart, and several hundred feet in length.
In between these two hard layers is a shaly limestone that is slightly
different in composition from the outer limestone layers. This middle
layer is softer, which makes it more susceptible to weathering and
erosion, thus forming the chute of the slide.
Looking like a large playground slide fit only for the Devil,
this site is a tilted remnant of sediments deposited in a sea that
occupied Utahs distant geologic past. Approximately 170 to
180 million years ago, a shallow sea originating from the north
spread south and east over areas of what are now Montana, Wyoming,
and Utah. This sea extended as far east as the present-day Colorado
River and south into northern Arizona.
Over
millions of years, massive amounts of sediment accumulated and eventually
formed layers of limestone and sandstone. In northern Utah, these
rocks are known as the Twin Creek Formation and are approximately
2700 feet thick. About 75 million years ago, folding and faulting
during a mountain- building episode tilted the Twin Creek rock layers
to a near-vertical position. Subsequent erosion has exposed the
near-vertical rock layers and created Devils Slide.
How to get to Devils Slide: 1. From the I-15/U.S. Highway
89 interchange in Farmington; head north on U.S. Highway 89 for
10.7 miles to a sign indicating the route to Morgan and Evanston.
Turn right (east) on I-84 and travel approximately 23 miles to the
scenic viewpoint turnoff located after milepost 110.
or 2. From the southern I-15/I-80 interchange in Salt Lake City;
head 11.3 miles east on I-80 to exit 134 (Mountain Dell Recreation
exit). Travel north on Utah State Highway 65 for 27.7 miles to the
town of Henefer. Turn left (west) and proceed 1 mile to I-84. Turn
left (west) onto I-84 and travel 2 miles to the scenic viewpoint
turnoff located just after milepost 111.
Geosights article, Survey Notes,
v. 35 no. 2, April 2003
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