Point Lookout
Near the park entrance, it is nearly 8000 feet in elevation.
[ Point Lookout
Trail ]


The cliffs above you are Point Lookout Sandstone. This formation
was deposited on top of the Mancos shale in shallow water barrier beaches
and sand bars while the sea temporarily retreated. Point Lookout, a
very resistant sandstone, is visible as a band of white cliffs along
the North Rim of Mesa Verde and in the cap rock of the mesas and buttes
surrounding Morefield Campground. When erosion wears away this protective
sandstone, the underlying soft shales of the Mancos Formation gully
rapidly.

Today, as you look at Point Lookout, you may see white patches on
the shale slopes. These are deposits left when water carrying various
minerals evaporated at the surface of the slope. Calcium carbonate (lime)
and magnesium sulfate (Epsom salt) are commonly found in these deposits.