Lybrook New Mexico Hoodoo Sisters
Bisti Badlands Arch and Moon
Bisti Badlands New Mexico Wonderland
Lybrook Badlands New Mexico
Bisti Badlands at Dawn with Rainbow
Ah-shi-sle-pah Badlands Monolith
Ah-shi-sle-pah Badlands Flock of Hoodoos
Orangs Bisti New Mexico Badlands Dawn
New Mexico Badlands
Bisti Hoodoo and Moon
Ah-shi-sle-pah Badlands Sock Puppet Hoodoo
 Bisti Bird Hoodoo
De-Na-Zin Beast New Mexico Hoodoo Beast
Bisti Badlands Hoodoos Before Dawn
Bisti Badlands Hoodoos
Dragon Hoodoo New Mexico
Ah-shi-sle-pah Badlands Two Towers
New Mexico Rock Gossip Hoodoos
New Mexico Badlands False Dawn
Hoodoo with a Hat
Bisti Badlands Early Light
New Mexico Badlands Hoodoos Mars Landscape
Bisti Badlands Early Light
New Mexico Badlands Wall of Hoodoo
Lybrook Nageezi Badlands
Mr. Hoodoo New Mexico
Lybrook Badlands from Above
Bisti Badlands Arch and Sandstone
Bisti Badlands Castles at Sunrise
Ah-shi-sle-pah
Lybrook Badlands Moon and Hoodoo
Ah-shi-sle-pah Moonscape
Bisti Badlands Sphinx
New Mexico Badlands Stone Table
Bisti Badlands Colors
Two heads san Jose Badlands New Mexico
Lybrook Badlands Knobby Hoodoo
New Mexico Badlands Passing Storm
Lybrook Badlands Towers
Ah-shi-sle-pah Badlands Stone Garden
Ojito Wilderness Badlands Dusk
San Jose Badlands New Mexico
Bisti Badlands Before Dawn
San Jose Badlands New Mexico Storm
Ah-shi-sle-pah New Mexico Twilight
Moon and Hoodoos

These badlands are in northwestern New Mexico, in a roughly circular corner of the Colorado Plateau called the San Juan Basin. From the Jurassic period on, layers of sandstones and shales were deposited, then exposed many millions of years later by uplift, volcanism and erosion. The geology is better explained elsewhere, by someone who knows what he's talking about Let's just say that where dinosaurs once criss-crossed ancient swamps and lakes, the land is now criss-crossed by oil and gas company roads. Extraction dominates today's San Juan Basin, yet in the remaining roadless areas are treasures: the badlands.

What a pleasure it is to drop into these hidden places from the wide open plains around them. They come upon you so suddenly that I have no doubt of the existance of more pockets of hoodoos awaiting discovery. Some have been saved from destruction, like the Ojito Wilderness, the Bisti De-Na-Zin Wilderness and the Ah-shi-slr-pah Wilderness. Others are guarded secrets shared among hikers and students of photography, geology and paleontology. These are fragile places where walking lightly is a necessity.

Here are some of my photographs of these wonderful places, presented in the hope that others will see the awesomeness of the lands here, and will spread the word: save the badlands! Another coal-fired power plant or strip mine could stll be in the dreams of the power companies, further endangering the already degraded air quality in the basin, not to mention the hoodoo lands shot through with seams of coal, ripe for the picking. Yes, we needs more and more energy, but it would be far too easy to take these places away from us, for far too little gain. I'll get off of my soapbox now; come see and learn for yourself.

Badlands of New Mexico