Thursday, January 31, 2013

Minnesota Geology Pictures - Folded Banded Iron Formation


Very near the Soudan Underground State Park administered by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is what some people call 'the most photographed outcrop in the state.'  This is a pavement outcrop of folded banded iron formation.  The outcrop consists of metallic hematite, red jasper and white chert.  These originally horizontal layers have been folded multiple times.  In some areas, the jasper and chert have fractures filled with milky quartz.



The picture above gives a larger sense of scale for the site.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Frozen Minnehaha Falls




A week ago, a colleague of mine visited Minnehaha Falls and took the picture above to show me.  The bedrock of the Minnehaha Falls area consists of the resistant Platteville Limestone, the Glenwood Shale and the St. Peter Sandstone.  As water falls over the more resistant limestone, it erodes the weakly cemented St. Peter Sandstone at the base of the 53-foot waterfall.

What's interesting to me in the picture isn't how the water has slowly frozen in the waterfall through the course of a Minnesota winter, it's all of the other frozen water to the right and left of Minnehaha Falls.  In between the limestone and sandstone is the Glenwood Shale.  As water soaks downward through the upper layers of soil it comes to this impermeable layer of shale and flows laterally until eventually reaching the eroded valley carved by Minnehaha Creek.  At this point the water cools to the point of freezing, forming a ring of large icicles.

On September 29, 2012, I took a gigapan of Minnehaha Falls (with a very low amount of water).  For a full size version of the gigapan, please click here.

For a more detailed post on the Minnehaha Falls, please click here.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Minnesota Geology Pictures - 800 Million Year Old Unconformity




In the town of Gilbert, Minnesota is an outcrop of 2,700 million year old greenstone.  Lava initially erupted into an ocean was basaltic, after undergoing a weak metamorphosism involving higher pressures and temperatures.  Plagioclase and pyroxene were changed to green minerals like chlorite and epidote.  Deposited on top of the greenstone is the 1,900 million year old Biwabik Iron Formation partially consisting of red hematic chert.  The difference between the two units are 800 million years of time.



Glaciers originating from the Rainy Provenance during Late Wisconsin glaciation removed most of the Biwabik Iron Formation from this location.  While these glaciers came through the area they also left numerous glacial striations seen in these two pictures as well.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Minnesota Geology Pictures - Gunflint Iron Formation & Magnetic Rock




In areas of Northeastern Minnesota, the bedrock is comprised of the 1,878 million year old Gunflint Iron Formation.  The iron formation consists of black or gray chert alternating with black iron-rich layers.  During the late Wisconsin glaciation, the southwest trending Rainy lobe left a large slab of iron formation laying vertical.  The bedding planes of the surrounding iron formation is nearly horizontal, contrasting with the vertical bedding planes of this slab.  The name given to this 25 foot slab is Magnetic Rock (though many areas of the iron formation are magnetic).

For a more picture heavy look at the hike into Magnetic Rock, click here.  The trail is over a mile in length to the rock.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Minnesota Geology Pictures - Sudbury Impact Breccia

At the beginning of 2012, I started what I thought would be a weekly series called Minnesota Monday Geology, with posts regarding different geological topics around the state.  For nine months the series went by well, until the beginning of the school year where my time was taken up with work associated with school, like planning lessons, grading jail, and taking care of my three children at home.  Although I have numerous posts to finish the series somewhere in my mind, as well as several including geology from neighboring states like South Dakota and Wisconsin (including a recent trip to Van Hise rock) and several with gigapans that I've begun taking, I'm starting another series today.




Nearly 1,850 million years ago, the region that is now Sudbury, Ontario was struck by an asteroid at least six miles in diameter.  A record of this catastrophic moment in time is preserved in the rock record along the Gunflint Trail, near the Canadian border in Minnesota.  The impact breccia at this location has been interpreted as a submarine debris flow 450 miles from the impact site.  At the time of the impact, this area of Minnesota was located near the shoreline of an ancient sea.  Found directly beneath the breccia layer is the 1,878 million year old Gunflint Iron Formation, directly above the breccia layer is the 1,850 million year old mudstones and shales of the iron-free Rove Formation.  The breccia layer is almost 7 meters thick, with the lower levels containing angular pieces of Iron Formation several meters across.  The iron formation found in the upper levels of breccia are much smaller.

A more complete post on the Sudbury Impact Breccia can by found here.




Both of my sons went on a hike to the breccia outcrops last June (2012).  It can be a challenging hike through some dense underbrush for 6 year old legs.



My 4 year old was more interested in the leaf that he 'captured' than what was around him, oh well.