+jollymon9999 Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 I'm at a loss. I have came across earthcaches dedicated to prairies, man-made dams, and man-made lakes; however, an earthcache about a natural wetland doesn't classify. I guess I'm looking for an explanation from the masses since I never received one from the reviewer. Quote
+TerryDad2 Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 As the program has developed, the direction the program is taking has moved. Submittals are evaluated on the current goals of what an EarthCache should be. Existing EarthCaches are not reevaluated and are grandfathered. That being said, It really is the slant you put into the writeup. A wetland for being a wetland's wouldn't fly. A dam describing how it stops river flow probably wouldn't fly either. I think both could still make an EarthCache by changing thier focus. A wetland showing the peat formation process and going on to describe coal formation may pass. A dam describing the sedimentation into the lake and the added erosion below the dam may also pass. I have a dam failure that looks at the geology of the achnor points that lead to its failure. Quote
+Renegade Knight Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 I'm at a loss. I have came across earthcaches dedicated to prairies, man-made dams, and man-made lakes; however, an earthcache about a natural wetland doesn't classify. I guess I'm looking for an explanation from the masses since I never received one from the reviewer. It's all in the angle of presentation. Why does the wetland exist? Some have unique geology and that's the angle you want. Quote
+GEO WALKER Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 How about presenting this from a hydrology angle, groundwater recharge, flood mitigation, or surface water filtration? Quote
+Konnarock Kid & Marge Posted April 22, 2009 Posted April 22, 2009 (edited) I'm at a loss. I have came across earthcaches dedicated to prairies, man-made dams, and man-made lakes; however, an earthcache about a natural wetland doesn't classify. I guess I'm looking for an explanation from the masses since I never received one from the reviewer. It's all in the angle of presentation. Why does the wetland exist? Some have unique geology and that's the angle you want. Good advice. Sorry for your loss but a natural wetland may be just that..wet. It may have a lot to do with ecology but absent significant geological phenomena, it may be a only a low lying, wet area that the government hasn't drained yet. I too have found that the guidelines have been reviewed and have been tightened. All is probably for the good. Compared to traditional caches and that reviewing process, the guidelines here are tougher but a whole lot more consistently applied. Pity those poor, poor ALR people, as they will attest to drastic change instead of a gradual tightening. Edited April 22, 2009 by Konnarock Kid & Marge Quote
XC_Tracker Posted April 30, 2009 Posted April 30, 2009 Give a good explanation of how the wetland was formed and what significance it has now. We have an EarthCache at a wetland and when we found it very easy to classify it under several choices. Quote
XC_Tracker Posted April 30, 2009 Posted April 30, 2009 (edited) Awesome, double post! Edited April 30, 2009 by XC_Tracker Quote
+joranda Posted May 6, 2009 Posted May 6, 2009 I wanted to do one on praires since there isn't many left in Illinois but now I think I have a way to mix it into earthcaching. Quote
+Konnarock Kid & Marge Posted May 6, 2009 Posted May 6, 2009 Give a good explanation of how the wetland was formed and what significance it has now. We have an EarthCache at a wetland and when we found it very easy to classify it under several choices. We have one "wetland" EC but is has all sort of geological implications. It is an ancient cranberry bog that was carved out by receding glaciers. Yep, there are cranberries growing there thanks to the Nature Conservancy. Quote
+mtmanva2 Posted May 8, 2009 Posted May 8, 2009 We have a lot of wetlands up here but they are mostly swamps. Do they count? Quote
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