New Mexico: Geology In The… (trip)

New Mexico: Geology In The Land Of Georgia O'Keeffe

  • Albuquerque International Airport, Albuquerque, NM, United States
  • Culture & Nature
New Mexico, United States

from $2,590* per person7 DaysOctober
Comfort accommodations Exertion level: 3
Operator: Naturalist Journeys 12 people max
Georgia O’Keeffe’s bold paintings often stay etched in our minds. Imagine having a geologist on hand to interpret her landscape’s formation! Join a Naturalist Journey’s trip that highlights the gamut from bedrock and earth processes to art and the story of a fascinating woman’s life. Examine the way that nature and culture intertwine in New Mexico, which for us holds endless fascination. Join Narca Moore-Craig and expert geologist Kirt Kempter, to explore Tent Rocks National Monument, Bandelier National Park, and the Valles Caldera National Preserve. We plan moderate hikes (3 miles, uneven ground) and time in Abiquiu, Ghost Ranch, and Plaza Blanca, Georgia’s White Place. Treats (this is your vacation!) include: great dining, lodgings at the Abiquiu Inn and in Santa Fe, and, for those that wish, a visit to the Ojo Caliente Hot Springs Spa. Learn more about the Rio Grande Rift, cataclysmic volcanic periods–young and old–and just how a hoodoo is formed!

Loading map, please wait...

Locations visited/nearby

New Mexico, United States

0 testimonials about this trip.

3 testimonials about the provider, Naturalist Journeys:

  • Reviewer: Ed and Beth Morsman, Deephaven, located in MN
    "What keeps us returning? For us Naturalist Journeys provides a holistic focus on flora and fauna, geology, history and culture without being obsessive about any one aspect. We travel in small groups of interesting, like-minded people with easy access to highly trained, caring naturalists. Superb destinations, knowledge, camaraderie, convenience, and caring professionals. For us Naturalist Journeys does it all!"
  • Reviewer: Rolla Wagner, Grove, located in OK
    “Peg Abbott is a pro – full of knowledge and diplomacy, generous with her time and attentive to our questions. Local guides add a new dimension to our learning with immediate local knowledge to share. I can hardly wait to go again!”
  • Reviewer: Frances Kemper, Lynchberg located in VA
    “Highlights were Costa Rica itself, the guides, birds and variety of activities. I had a chance to see this beautiful country with people in the know and to interact with people and environments that are not offered to ‘common’ tourists.”

Comments from Facebook

Itinerary

Sun., Oct. 7 Santa Fe
Plan to arrive at the Albuquerque International Airport (ABQ) no later than 2:00 PM. We plan to drive north to Santa Fe pausing along the way to enjoy the fall colors. We arrive in Santa Fe late afternoon, with time to settle into our accommodations, located near the central historic plaza. Enjoy a welcome dinner at one of the many great restaurants of Santa Fe.
Accommodations in Santa Fe (D)

Mon., Oct. 8 Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument
Today we explore the geologic past of little-known Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument, situated at the southeastern base of New Mexico’s Jemez Mountains. We consider this a jewel of a park, one that Kirt knows in detail. Tent rocks are another name for hoodoos, and this area on the Pajarito (“Little Bird”) Plateau provides a visual feast of dramatic rock formations left from volcanic explosions and pyroclastic flows.  We explore the 3-mile Canyon Trail which follows many narrow passages and climbs 700 feet in elevation. We pass through pinon-juniper woodlands, where we should see Ponderosa Pines, Manzanita, Indian Paintbrush, and Apache Plume, Red-tailed Hawks, Violet-green Swallows, and possibly even a Golden Eagle soaring above us. At the top, we'll be rewarded with spectacular views of slot canyons, tent structures topped with caprock, and a broad vista of the Sangre de Cristo, Sandia, and Jemez mountains and the Rio Grande Valley. Learn more about the volcanic history of Bearhead volcano, active ~7 million years ago, and responsible for many of the unique deposits now sculpted by erosion in the Tent Rocks area.

After a picnic lunch and depending on time, we'll take an optional drive through historic Los Cerrillos ("Little Hills"), the site of the old mining tent camps where in the 1880s, 3,000 prospectors extracted gold, silver, turquoise, lead, and zinc. The Cerillos Mining District is on the New Mexico Registry of historic places, and situated on the Turquoise Trail Scenic Byway.

We then return to Santa Fe, where you can dine at your leisure in one of many fine cafes within walking distance of our hotel.
Accommodations in Santa Fe (B,L)

Tue., Oct. 9 Santa Fe / Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / Museum Hill
This morning we will take a geologic and birding hike in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains on the outskirts of Santa Fe. Among the highlights will be a hands-on meeting with the Great Unconformity, where 300 million-year-old limestone rests upon 1.6 billion-year-old granite, representing a missing time gap of 1.3 billion years!

After a visit to the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, enjoy more time in Santa Fe, North America's oldest capital city, to explore as you wish among local galleries, shops and attractions. It’s hard to ignore the daily pageant of vendors set up right around the plaza, in their colorful wear, talking in native dialect.

We gather for lunch at an appointed time and place and then provide transport up into the foothills of the mountains to Museum Hill, where those who wish can tour any of four world-class museums: The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, the Museum of International Folk Art, the Museum of Spanish Colonial Art, and the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. You may prefer to stay on the square in Santa Fe; we invite you to explore as you wish.

Dinner is at your leisure again tonight. We’re happy to advise you–so many restaurants to choose from!
Accommodations in Santa Fe (B,L)

Wed., Oct. 10 Valles Caldera / Bandelier National Park
After breakfast, we head to the Valles Caldera, the world’s type example of a resurgent caldera. The caldera  is currently on track to become the nation’s newest national park. We will explore the fascinating geologic story told by rock exposures inside and outside the caldera. Since the massive eruption that produced the caldera approximately 1.25 million years ago, the caldera has experienced profound changes, involving resurgent uplift, numerous volcanic eruptions, lakes, and erosion of the rim.

After crossing the caldera from east to west, we have lunch in either La Cueva or Jemez Springs. Afterwards, we visit the famous ancestral puebloan ruins at Bandelier National Monument. This is a gem of the national park system, with impressive ruins situated along a stream in the Jemez Mountains. At this time of year temperatures are great for walking, fall color is at its prime, and in shrubs along the creek we encounter mixed flocks of Chickadees, Titmice, and Woodpeckers that may hold some lingering migrants. This monument boasts the highest density of archaeological sites of any national park, all in a distinctive and beautiful canyon carved into the Pajarita Plateau. The ancestral puebloans inhabited this site–which has an abundance of water–even after abandoning others in their region. We walk trails established in the 600-foot-deep Frijoles Canyon to examine the historic structures. The geology of the area is fascinating as well, including spectacular cliffs of Bandelier Tuff, erupted from the Valles Caldera.
We wrap up the day with a stop to view the vast landscape carved by the Rio Grande River, at White Rock Canyon Overlook, before heading to Abiquiu and our delightful lodgings at the Abiquiu Inn, in the valley of the Rio Chama.
Accommodations at the Abiquiu Inn www.abiquiuinn.com (B,L,D)

Thurs., Oct. 11 Plaza Blanca / Georgia O’Keeffe Home / El Rito
After breakfast we take an easy morning hike in Plaza Blanca, featuring bizarrely sculpted white cliffs that were a favorite painting subject for Georgia O’Keeffe.These rocks also tell an important story in the geologic history of the Rio Grande Rift, a major geologic structure in New Mexico. Following our hike we will explore the boundary of the Rio Grande Rift with the Colorado Plateau, featuring multi-colored sandstones capped by volcanic lavas from the Jemez Volcanic Field.

We return to the Abiquiu Inn for lunch, and afterwards tour the home of Georgia O’Keeffe, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. O’Keeffe moved permanently to this home in 1949, inspired by the landscapes that surround Abiquiu.
Afterwards we head north to the charming village of El Rito, 15 miles north of Abiquiu.  We explore the colorful red cliffs on the outskirts of El Rito, which tell a story of great compression and mountain uplift in New Mexico.

This evening we dine at El Farolito, a local El Rito restaurant which has won several awards for its green chili.
Accommodations at the Abiquiu Inn (B,L)

Fri., Oct. 12 Abiquiu / Georgia's Landscapes and their Geology
This day in the field we will explore the geologic story behind the landscape that so fascinated Georgia O’Keeffe at her home at Ghost Ranch, situated on the eastern edge of the Colorado Plateau. We will take a 3-mile hike traversing bold sandstone cliffs that overlook the Piedra Lumbre Valley, looking out toward Cerro Pedernal, a geographic fixture that Georgia painted often. Following lunch at Ghost Ranch we will visit the dinosaur museum, where superbly preserved fossils of one of the first dinosaurs (Coelophysis) are on display. The important fossil discoveries at Ghost Ranch have led to the location being named a World Heritage Site.

En route back to Abiquiu, we stop along the highway to appreciate scenic vistas along the Rio Chama and to learn more about how the Abiquiu landscape evolved over geologic time. Time permitting, we might also visit Poshuoinge, a large ancestral pueblo ruin overlooking the Rio Chama just a few miles east of Abiquiu.
Dinner tonight back at the Abiquiu Inn.
Accommodations at the Abiquiu Inn (B,L,D)

Sat., Oct. 13 Exploring Taos / Ojo Caliente
After breakfast we travel to Taos via the “High Road” that extends from Espanola. Our route is dotted with picturesque small villages rich in Hispanic culture. Endless vistas, fire-red strings of drying chilies, beautiful mission churches, quality weavings, and just great culture and scenery.

While in Taos, we visit the mission church of Saint Francis of Assisi, in Ranchos de Taos, painted by Georgia O’Keeffe and photographed by Ansel Adams. The church is prized for its dramatic form, built of indigenous adobe and wood.

Enjoy lunch in Taos at one of Kirt’s favorite restaurants. He suggests we try Rellonos en Nogadas at Antonio’s, a Taste of Mexico, located by the plaza.

We then travel to Ojo Caliente, where we offer an afternoon hike, either to a glittering mica mine or to the important ancestral puebloan village of Posiouinge, followed by a luxuriant soak in the hot springs. These springs have been a fixture on the New Mexico historical scene for centuries, visited by the likes of Geronimo, Zebulon Pike, and Kit Carson to name a few. The geologic setting of the hot springs, however, is a story millions of years in the making, including a mountain, a rift, and deep circulating ground water.

We can’t think of a better place to celebrate our week of exploring O’Keeffe country than a tasty farewell dinner at Ojo Caliente’s Artesian restaurant.
Accommodations at the Abiquiu Inn (B,L,D)

Sun., Oct. 14 Departures
Morning departures through Santa Fe and on to Albuquerque for flights home (or we can drop you in Santa Fe if you wish to extend your visit.  There is a handy shuttle back to the airport from there if you wish to do so.

More information from Naturalist Journeys: