“Travel and change of place impart new vigor to the mind.” Seneca

Looking down on the Snake River on a landscape over which wild horses roamed 3.5 million years ago, and one settlers crossed going West just 150 years ago. -- Photo by Pat Bean
Travels With Maggie
Did you know Idaho has a state fossil? I didn’t – until today when I visited Haggarrman Fossil Beds National Monument.
It’s the Haggarman horse, which lived about 3.5 million years ago. Fossils from about 30 of the animals, which sort of looks like a hybrid between a horse and a zebra, were found near Haggarman, Idaho, back in the late 1920s.

Turning my back on the Snake River, this upward view of the monument looks to the future, and hopefully less dependency on fossil fuels. It's a beautiful view. -- Photo by Pat Bean
The area, which overlooks the Snake River near Haggarman and is about 20 miles north of Twin Falls, has also turned up an extinct species of camel that once roamed North America, as well as a mastodon, a dirk tooth cat and a bone crushing dog that lived over 3 million years ago.
The area is considered a world treasure because it contains the richest known deposits from the Pliocene epoch, the period before the ice age and the same period as the early evolution of man.
Fascinating, or so it was to me.
But the monument also has something for those who only want to go back in time about 200 years. It includes a portion of the Oregon Trail, which was first used by fur trappers, and then in the 1840s for the great western migration.
Today’s first day back on the road was short in miles, but certainly covered a lot of time. Life is good.
Sorry I can’t agree with you about wind power Pat, For the damage it does to the environment you get very little in return. The noise, the spoiled views, the cabling across wild landscapes. I’d rather have nuclear to be honest. at least you get a worthwhile amount of energy from it.
Our problem is not getting energy, but in storage and transporting it. Petrols are energy rich and easy to move about.
Electricity is not. until we sort out that problem we will not solve the energy crisis.
Going back in time geologically really puts a perspective on things for me. It shows me how very small we, the human race, are in the grand scheme of things. I often wonder what things will be like 3 million years from now on Planet Earth. Surely, as has happened previously in earth’s history, the top of the food chain will have changed more than once again.