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By Heidi Henderson | November 10th 2009 12:54 PM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Heidi Henderson

Chair of the Vancouver Paleontological Society. Co-author of In Search of Ancient BC, Volume I, Heartland Publishing.
... Full Bio



We soak up the breathtaking views after a long morning's paddle. The east and south sides of our route are bound by the imposing white peaks of the Cariboo Mountains, the northern boundary of the Interior wet belt, rising up across the Rocky Mountain Trench, and the Isaac Formation, the oldest of seven formations that make up the Cariboo Group. Some 270 million plus years ago, had one wanted to buy waterfront property in what is now British Columbia, you’d be looking somewhere between Prince George and the Alberta border. The rest of the province had yet to arrive but would be made up of over twenty major terranes from around the Pacific. The rock that would eventually become the Cariboo Mountains and form the lakes and valleys of Bowron was far out in the Pacific Ocean, down near the equator.

With tectonic shifting, these rocks drifted north-eastward, riding their continental plate, until they collided with and joined the Cordillera in what is now British Columbia. Continued pressure and volcanic activity helped create the tremendous slopes of the Cariboo Range we see today with repeated bouts of glaciation during the Pleistocene carving their final shape.

Comments

Becky Jungbauer's picture
Did continued pressure and volcanic activity also create Caribou Coffee? Or was that the repeated bouts of Starbucks on every corner of the tectonic plate?

Fossil Huntress's picture

That particular brew arose from the tectonic forces of the French Press. Not well documented in the literature but true even so.



Becky Jungbauer's picture
I checked the literature and found a rare photo of a cutaway of the inside of a volcano during a French Press-induced eruption.



Fossil Huntress's picture


After the last FP event, they analyzed the lava and found it was equal parts rhyolite and kaffein, a bitter, white crystalline xanthine alkaloid now employed as a psychoactive stimulant drug by the Nasa space program.



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