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Teal-blue rocks are scattered around the mine site while "Sleeping-head Rock" keeps watch from the right side

00688-face-rock-blue-rock-8.jpg The eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsA trickle of rusty, contaminated water exudes from a tunnel in the hillside above the mine tailingsThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsA trickle of rusty, contaminated water exudes from a tunnel in the hillside above the mine tailingsThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsA trickle of rusty, contaminated water exudes from a tunnel in the hillside above the mine tailingsThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsA trickle of rusty, contaminated water exudes from a tunnel in the hillside above the mine tailingsThe eroding old mine site at the top of Keystone Canyon sits just a few hundred feet below the peak of New York MountainThumbnailsA trickle of rusty, contaminated water exudes from a tunnel in the hillside above the mine tailings

"Sleeping-head Rock," as I call it, looks like a side-profile carving of a head with the exaggerated eyes, nose and lips of a cartoon character. Fred Flintstone?