copyright 2001, Grabo'
Devil's Tower, the world’s
first national monument,
is believed to be the remaining
core of a since-eroded-away
volcano. In October, my daughter
Jennifer and I were trying
to get right up next to the
tower to take a picture looking
straight up the edge. We
didn’t make it because
the ice was too treacherous.
But I thought this view of
the Devil's tower was pretty
dramatic. Help stamp out
boring pictures by buying
a copy of this image!
Native American legend has
it that a bear was chasing
some tribal princesses when
the ground swelled under
them, creating Devil’s
Tower. As the tower grew,
the bear clawed at it, trying
to get at the maidens (leaving
the claw marks you see on
the tower today.) Pardon
me if I didn’t get
this legend exactly right
- I heard it over 30 years
ago when I was a teenager.
One fascinating thing about
the tower is the ridges on
it - the rock is actually
made up of crystals of hexagonal
rock (all the rubble which
surrounds it is also hexagonal.)
This makes Devil’s
Tower a fascinating place
to take pictures - I could
spend weeks there. Unfortunately,
I had to get home.
This photograph has been
waiting nearly 20 years to
be enlarged, and is as yet
unsold, and available for
commissioning (see below.)
Ocotober,
early 1980’s, Devil’s
Tower, Wyoming
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