Where on Earth (WOE) are we?
Open with care.
I hate flying. It’s a stress scene. As always, I couldn't take everything I wanted to. My e-passes didn’t arrive, snow was forecast, I had to be at the airport at 5:15 am, etc. Security’s always a puzzle (infrequent flier) so I imitate the people in line ahead. It went well until TSA discovered a Swiss Army knife in my pack. (I forgot, really!) Stuff spilled all over when they inspected the pack, it was crammed so full. I could barely lift my carry-on bag into the overhead compartment.
The plane was packed full. No one smiled, few chatted. Somebody coughed and sneezed regularly. A baby wailed behind me. We waited, then waited, taxied a little and waited again -- for de-icing. Finally we took off. It was getting light and through the clouds were glimpses of mountains, frozen lakes, broad white meadows, high snowy peaks with tree-lines far below and glacial cirques. It was beautiful. I relaxed, even dozed off. When I awoke, the clouds were gone.But where on Earth were we? It was a harsh country -- brown, yellow-brown, reddish-brown, ochre, burnt-ochre -- with almost no vegetation to obscure the landscape. The landforms were clear and striking. [Click on images to view.]WOE? #1: Entrenched drainages in foreground and distance, “confined to a canyon or gorge ... with little or no flood plain ... often with meanders.” The CLUE is a prominent landform.
One of the many wonderlands of the western USA; source.
#1 611873.00 m E 4119824.00 m N; this is the location of the CLUE, an abandoned meander of the San Jan River#2 580157.12 m E 4101810.81 m N (approximate); looking toward Monument Valley#3 488244.77 m E 4064986.78 m N; one of many entrenched drainages on the Plateau#4 448807.42 m E 4038890.32 m N; this strike valley is traversed by US Hwy 89#5 422814.73 m E 4027471.85 m N; Colorado River not far upstream from Grand Canyon#6 408229.18 m E 4022493.52 m N (approximate); starting across the Kaibab Plateau