Two kilometers northwest of here, the St.
Louis River flows on its way to Lake Superior, it’s largest
tributary on the American side. Its broad river valley, visible
from this point, is in a western extension of the Lake Superior
basin. Over the last two million years, the Lake Superior basin was
scoured out by kilometer-thick glaciers repeatedly advancing along
its length and eroding the soft sedimentary rocks that had filled
it.
Near the end of the last glacial period,
about 12,000 years ago, a tongue-shaped lobe of ice in the Lake
Superior basin, called the Superior lobe, started to melt and
recede northward into the basin. The southwestern end of the basin
filled with its meltwater, forming Glacial Lake Duluth
at
roughly 1085 feet above sea level. The meltwater lake
contained large amounts of red clay glacially eroded from the
red sandstones and shales in the basin. Glacial Lake Duluth
existed for centuries, and during that time lake sediment,
comprised mostly of red clay, was deposited. That red clay is
exposed down the slope from this overlook and forms the banks
of the St. Louis River valley.
As the ice melted further northward into
the basin, the primitive Lake Superior was able to drain by newly
opened eastern outlets to the lower Great Lakes, and the lake level
dropped about 60 meters below its present level. As the lake level
fell, the meandering channel of the St. Louis River removed much of
the red clay, creating the terrain you see.
Relieved of the great weight of the
glacial ice, the earth’s crust has been slowly rising. The rate of
rebound is fastest where the load of ice has been most recently
removed. Thus, the northeastern lake basin and its eastern outlet
are rising faster, thereby tilting the basin toward the southwest
and flooding the lower course of the St. Louis River from Fond du
Lac to the Duluth Harbor a process that continues today.
Located on state highway 23, one mile north
of junction with county road 18 at a roadside veterans
memorial.

TO LOG THIS
CACHE:
1) How many meters of lake sediment were eventually
deposited?
2) Measure your elevation, how far under Glacial Lake Duluth would
you be?
E-mail me the
answers
HERE.
Source:
Display - Geological Society of Minnesota in partnership with the
Minnesota Department of Transportation and the Minnesota Geological
Survey, 1998