The Denver Post

Glenwood Caverns and hot springs protected

Park Service gives areas landmark status

- By Andrea TeresMarti­nez

Glenwood Caverns and Iron Mountain Hot Springs have together been designated as a National Natural Landmark by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior.

The region’s iconic fixtures are owned by Steven and Jeanne Beckley.

“Glenwood’s caverns and hot springs are iconic Colorado treasures,” U.S. Senator Michael Bennet said in the release. “I am pleased to see them recognized by Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland as a National Natural Landmark and appreciate the Beckleys’ ongoing efforts to preserve these valuable resources for future generation­s.”

The designatio­n, announced on Dec. 13, cited the millions of years of geologic history in the location and the unique cave ecosystems that are present, according to the announceme­nt from Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park and Iron Mountain Hot Springs.

“We’re super excited, it’s been a lot of years in the making,” Steven Beckley told the Post Independen­t. “It’s quite the honor. It’s amazing that they took this geologic wonder of the hot springs and the caverns and how they were all formed and the unique life forms that are in it, and identified it as a very special place.”

The Beckleys first purchased the property in 1999 after 16 years of trying to buy it from its previous owners.

“Why would we go through all this trouble to get this designatio­n if it doesn’t mean anything? But, it just means a lot for us because when I first fell in love with the cave, I started trying to do something,” Steven Beckley said. “We’ve gone to great lengths to make sure we’re protecting that cave and being stewards. We put in airtight doors and we’ve monitored the humidity and the temperatur­e in the cave for the last 25 years.”

For the Beckleys, applying for the designatio­n was the next step in their conservati­on efforts.

“We knew that they’d done some cases in the past, so we put an applicatio­n in,” Steven Beckley said. “We applied because we knew it was a special place and we thought it should be

registered nationally for its uniqueness.”

The National Natural Landmarks (NNL) Program was created in 1962 to identify, recognize and support the conservati­on of sites that represent the natural heritage of the U. S., especially those with outstandin­g examples of biological or geological features, according to the release. Landmark sites are deemed nationally significan­t based on their outstandin­g condition, illustrati­ve character, rarity, diversity and value to science and education.

According to a letter addressed to Steven and Jeanne Beckley from the U. S. Department of Interior, Glenwood Caverns and Iron Mountain Hot Springs were specifical­ly picked for this designatio­n because

it was discovered that the downcuttin­g of the Colorado River into the Leadville Limestone created unique ecosystems within Iron Mountain.

“Both the Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park caves and Iron Mountain Hot Springs are habitats for species adapted to live in the extreme environmen­ts of the hot springs and the low-nutrient conditions of the caves, including eight native troglobite­s (fully cave-adapted species) and a diversity of microbes including 38 unique types of bacteria,” the release states.

Additional­ly, the polygeneti­c suite of hypogene karst processes identified within these landmarks have been operationa­l from the inception of Glenwood Caverns during the geologi

cal pseudo-period known as the Pliocene-pleistocen­e epochs, which began about 2.5 million years ago, according to the letter from the U.S. Department of Interior.

Steven Beckley said he and his wife applied for the NNL designatio­n over 10 years ago, though they never expected the process would take as long as it

did. Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park General Manager Nancy Heard has been working for the Beckley’s for over 15 years, and Steven Beckley recalled the designatio­n being one of her responsibi­lities when she first took the job.

“They went through a whole process of review through several doctors and geologists…” Beckley said. “… But it just took a lot of years for the experts to go through all the processes and to get it passed.”

Hanging Lake was another landmark in Garfield County to receive an NNL designatio­n in 2011.

Steven Beckley said that while he doesn’t think the NNL designatio­n will have an impact on visitation, he hopes it will help to protect the surroundin­g land from Rocky Mountain Industrial­s’ expansion proposal, which would expand the existing Transfer Trail limestone quarry from 20 acres to an open pit mine of 321 acres.

“There actually are other caves on quarry property that also have significan­ce, so (I’m hoping) that we will be cautious before we start just throwing stuff like that through quarry operations,” Steven Beckley said. “I hope this will have an impact on making sure that the future quarry activities are, maybe not stopped, but that they’re at least thoughtful­ly done, so they don’t impact potential treasures. Once they’re destroyed, you’ll never get it back.”

More so than being worried about caves being destroyed by the expansion, the owner’s main concern had more to do with the hot springs.

“The limestone that the caves are in is the same aquifer that supplies the water to the hot springs, so we’re more concerned at this time about the quarry impacting the recharging of the hot springs aquifer, and impacting the hot springs … and the flows to those to those facilities,” Steven Beckley said.

Damage to the undergroun­d cave network is also a big concern for the Glenwood Springs Citizens’ Alliance, the community group opposing the limestone mine expansion proposal.

“We know cave formations exist within the proposed mine expansion area. The unexplored Witches’ Pantry Cave, discovered in 2019, is a key example,” Citizens’ Alliance Vice President Heather McGregor said in a prepared statement to the Post Independen­t. “Mining those limestone layers would destroy those caves, and could disrupt the complex undergroun­d network that recharges the hot springs aquifer. If the undergroun­d groundwate­r network is damaged, Glenwood Springs could lose an irreplacea­ble natural resource that is also the economic driver of our community.”

 ?? GLENWOOD CAVERNS ADVENTURE PARK VIA THE POST INDEPENDEN­T ?? View of King’s Row Caverns in the Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park.
GLENWOOD CAVERNS ADVENTURE PARK VIA THE POST INDEPENDEN­T View of King’s Row Caverns in the Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park.
 ?? PROVIDED BY IRON MOUNTAIN HOT SPRINGS ?? Iron Mountain Hot Springs in Glenwood Springs will open a 21-and-up “Up River” section on June 1.
PROVIDED BY IRON MOUNTAIN HOT SPRINGS Iron Mountain Hot Springs in Glenwood Springs will open a 21-and-up “Up River” section on June 1.
 ?? IRON MOUNTAIN HOT SPRINGS VIA THE POST-INDEPENDEN­T ?? The Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park and Iron Mountain Hot Springs together have been designated a national landmark.
IRON MOUNTAIN HOT SPRINGS VIA THE POST-INDEPENDEN­T The Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park and Iron Mountain Hot Springs together have been designated a national landmark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States