dryfj.com / drycyclist.com (kevin cook)

30/49
[ stop the slideshow ]

It appears that rock, silt and wood debris tumbles continually down into Keystone Canyon from the old mine site

00683-mine-approach-550px.jpg The eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right side

Somewhere around that pile of earth is a mine shaft.