Fieldtrip
15A of the QMIII Project, to Montreal and Mont Treblant
National Park, Quebec, Canada.
May 4,
2015. I drive up to Montreal in the late
afternoon, after the Frontiers of Science Poster Session. A little snow is still on the ground in the Adirondacks,
as streaks on the higher peaks and small mounds in sheltered spots along the
highway. I arrive about 9PM and check
into the Champlain Hotel, off of Route 15 in Brossard, Quebec.
May 5,
2014. In the morning, I take the
Champlain Bridge across the St Laurence River to Montreal and attend the Joint
Assembly that is being held at the Palais des Congres de Montreal (the Montreal Convention Center),
parking in a basemeng garage on Rue Notre Dame. My colleagues Vadim
Levin, Fiona Darbyshire, Ian Bastow
and Andrew Hynes are all presenting talks on the geology and geophysics of the
North American Craton.
Around
noon, Vadim Levin and I take a break from the meeting
and walk to Quai Jacque Carter, a park on the St. Laurence River. We stand gazing across the water, which is
flowing swiftly, towards the mid-river islands.
We can see the top of the geodesic dome of the Biosphere de Montreal and
Alexander Calder’s great metalwork sculpture, Man, amongst the trees.
Back at
the meeting, I presented a poster on the structure of the Appalachian Front.
We all
had dinner in a Moroccan restaurant near the convention center. Afterward, though I hurried back to the
garage, I narrowly missed having my car locked in it overnight. I did not anticipate its closure at 9:30PM, which seemed very early to
a New Yorker like me. Fortunately, I tracked down a workman who very kindly
opened the gate for me.
May 6,
2015. I attended the meeting until about
2:30 PM and then, at Andrew Hynes advice, drove north to look at the Grenville-aged
rocks outcropping in the Laurentian Highlands.
I took Highway 15, followed by Routes 329 and 125 to Parc
National du Mont Treblant. I parked at a trailhead just north of the
gate. I hiked westward on an unpaved woods road, following a little creek named
Ruisseau de Mont de cascades. The woods of the Laurentian highlands are well behind those of southern New York, with
patches of snow still on the ground, few leaves on the trees, and Trout Lilies
just spouting. The creek was running
over rock ledges in many cascades and small waterfalls. I examined the rocks as I walked along. I followed the creek uphill until the land
flattened out and the creek widened into a a beaver pond and small wetland. I bushwhacked to the shore of the pond and looked
for beavers and other wildlife, but spotted nothing. A small hiker’s hut, Le Geal
Bleau (The Blue Jay) is built near the northern end
of the wetland. I then took a steep
trail up on top of Mont de Cascades, to a small rock ledge with a nice view that
looked northwest. The rest of the summit
has dense evergreen woods that blocked the view. I took a different trail down from the
summit. This one led to the park
entrance. From there, I walked the park
access road to Lac Provost and stood on its shore, among beech trees and
bushes, by a marshy area with a beaver dam.
The sun was setting now and the foreground was in shadow, though the
east side of the lake and the hills beyond were brightly lit by its reddish light. I then walked the short distance north along
the park road to my car. About three
hours of hiking.
May 7,
2015. I left Brossard at 6AM and drove
straight back to New York, arriving in Tappan at 12:30PM.