Newbie
March 2017 - Mar 23, 2017 2:01:40 GMT
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Post by colleenella on Mar 19, 2017 19:16:19 GMT
21 miles N/NE of Tularosa, NM, there is a section of earth that appears black/dark green. I can't zoom in to see what this large dark section of earth could be. Street view doesn't get close enough to examine this section of earth more closely. It is approximately 42 miles long and 3-5 miles wide.
Can other earth browsers of New Mexico help me out?
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March 2015 - Jan 23, 2023 9:58:32 GMT
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Post by Admin on Mar 19, 2017 19:42:08 GMT
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Master Guide Admin
March 2015 - Nov 25, 2024 11:00:56 GMT
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Post by nostranger on Mar 19, 2017 22:49:39 GMT
Hi colleenella, welcome to the GEC.
If you turn on the Gallery in the Layers Panel, then expand it so that you can then turn on Volcanoes, a placemark appears at the top end of that feature that will explain .
" The massive Carrizozo lava flow, which traveled 75 km down the Tularosa Basin of south-central New Mexico, is one of Earth's longest known Holocene lava flows. The youthful-looking basaltic flow originated from a broad low basaltic shield on the floor of the Tularosa Basin, east of the Rio Grande Rift, topped by Little Black Peak, a small cinder cone. The 4.2 cu km tube-fed pahoehoe flow covered 330 sq km and has a width that ranges from 1 km in the central neck region to 5 km in the proximal and distal portions. The flow was inferred to have been emplaced during a single long-duration eruption estimated to have lasted 2-3 decades. A surface exposure age of about 5200 years Before Present was obtained for the Carrizozo lava flow, the second youngest in New Mexico. An older lava flow traveled 16 km south and 11 km east from Broken Back crater. "
Hope that helps.
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Newbie
March 2017 - Mar 23, 2017 2:01:40 GMT
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Post by colleenella on Mar 23, 2017 0:55:24 GMT
Thank you for the information. I am delighted.
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