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The eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York Mountain

00687-mine-view-800px.jpg It appears that rock, silt and wood debris tumbles continually down into Keystone Canyon from the old mine siteThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideIt appears that rock, silt and wood debris tumbles continually down into Keystone Canyon from the old mine siteThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideIt appears that rock, silt and wood debris tumbles continually down into Keystone Canyon from the old mine siteThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideIt appears that rock, silt and wood debris tumbles continually down into Keystone Canyon from the old mine siteThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right sideIt appears that rock, silt and wood debris tumbles continually down into Keystone Canyon from the old mine siteThumbnailsTeal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right side

It wouldn't be a long climb, mileage-wise, to get up to the ridge, but it would be slow-going since it's fairly steep.