Stalactites and Stalagmites Rapidly Formed Home
Mollie Kathleen's Marvelous Mysteries
Story and Photos by Gary Livesay
(Emphasis added by PocketAnswers.net)
Our family arrived early at the Mollie Kathleen Gold Mine, eager for the tour of
our lives. Together with my three sons, I had just finished backpacking through
the high country of Colorado. Our excitement grew as Dennis Lanning, the mine
owner, fitted us with hard hats, miners' lights, and jackets. He warned that we
would be walking through some water. I should have realized that caves, even
man-made ones, go hand-in-hand with water.
We filed into the primitive 'man-skip', listened as the door clanged shut, and
held our breath as we rattled down into the darkness.
Mollie Kathleen never realized that these underground tunnels would one day
provide a silent testimony to the speed at which formations can grow.
It was during a
hiking adventure in 1891 that Mollie Kathleen Gortner discovered a rich
outcropping of gold at Cripple Creek, Colorado.1 She became the first woman in
history to register a mining claim in her own name. Altogether, more than 500
underground gold mines worked the rich seams inside the crater of a dormant
volcano, 10 km (6 miles) across. Over 625 t (22 million oz) of gold–US$6 billion
on today's market–were produced before the rush declined in the 1950s and '60s.
The skip stopped. We were 300 m (1,000 ft) inside the Earth. As we walked
through the narrow tunnel, our lamps threw eerie shadows. The glistening
walls were covered with amazing shapes–crystalline formations like flowers, but
made from calcite and sodium chloride. Paula, my wife, commented on their
beauty.
Stalactites and stalagmites were everywhere. They grew from the ceiling,
floor and walls. The fine ones were hollow inside and called straws. They
dominated many parts of the mine, often making it hard to maneuver. Lots of them
had grown all the way from the roof to the floor, and would become the
foundations for future columns.
Columns were everywhere. An old wooden chair had stalagmites sitting on it. A
small stalagmite was even growing up from a discarded explosives container. In
places, the columns were profuse, reminding me of bars in a jail, or pipes on an
organ. Some were huge, up to 2.7 m (9 ft) tall and 10-12 cm (4-5 in) in
diameter.
And the colours! A kaleidoscope of red, blue, green, turquoise, pink and orange
surrounded us. The bright green, azure and blue pointed to the presence of
copper. The stunning rose pink and red suggested manganese. Dull yellow and grey
hinted at magnesium. Even iron got into the mix of things, colouring columns
with spectacular orange, red and yellow. Around one corner, the mine became snow
white with calcite and sodium chloride.
Changing times...
I thought back to my early evolutionary/long-age training when I was told that
such wonders took hundreds of thousands, even millions of years to form. I
thought of natural caves I had toured where I had been given a similar story–and
believed it without question.2 But here, before my eyes, I was looking at things
that should not exist. I was starting to comprehend their significance.
It was obvious that these wonders had not taken millions of years to form.
Dennis explained that they only began growing after 1961, once the mining
operations ceased and the airflow to the tunnels was shut off. There had been an
amazing growth in the last 20 years. Some formations were only five or ten years
old. New soda straws, 60-90 cm (2-3 ft) long, had appeared in that time.
According to Dennis, the principal factors for growth are high moisture, low
airflow and no sunlight. When the conditions are right, time is not that
important. Neither does temperature make much difference. We noticed that the
first tunnel we entered was cool–around 15°C (58°F) as you might expect in a
natural cave. However, we found other parts of the mine quite warm, due to the
heat coming from the walls.
Something else gave my
million-year thinking a jolt. I saw with my own eyes that wooden frames, used to
support the mine, were becoming petrified. I even found that one log had almost
completely transformed from wood to mineral.
We came away from our tour of the Mollie Kathleen Gold Mine with a new
appreciation for the age of things. If all those features could form in less
than 40 years, imagine what could happen in 4,300 years since the global Flood
described in the Bible. The Flood would mean an abundance of water with high
mineral content draining through the Earth–ideal conditions for making
magnificent formations in caves. Contrary to what I had been taught, Mollie
Kathleen convinced me that the events and timescale described in the Bible make
sense.
Gary Livesay is an electronics technician who is currently working as a
broadcast engineer at a CBS affiliate in Indianapolis, Indiana. Gary has
developed a special interest in young-Earth science issues.
(Source: Creation Ministries International)