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Flint Hills Rock Velvet Cake EarthCache

Hidden : 1/8/2011
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:

Thanks to Professor Larry Young from Cloud Community College who brought us to this area for a geology field trip experience, we were able to find and appreciate this beautiful cross-cut layered section of the Flint Hills. We like this area because you can actually park your car and look or study the layers. I've seen this layered cuts along highways here in KS but anywhere to park. This is a good location for this earthcache.


The name of the cache comes from the Red Velvet Cake, which is perfectly layered alternating different flavors of vanilla and chocolate. The Flint Hills as you will read further down are layered alternating between layers of limestone and shale.

Flint Hills

Few places in this country demonstrate the connection between landscape and people better than the tallgrass prairie in the Flint Hills. The Flint Hills and the surrounding area are shaped by the rocks that lie directly beneath the vegetation and soil—the same rocks which made cultivation difficult and led to the use of native prairie grasses for ranching. This rocky terrain is closely tied to today’s ranching culture. The Flint Hills region is characterized by thin soils, limestone outcrops, vegetation-covered shale intervals between the limestones, deeply incised valleys, and dissected topography. The Flint Hills cross east central Kansas from the north near the Nebraska border and extend into Oklahoma to the south. Many of the limestones contain nodules and layers of flint (also called chert)—a hard, dense rock that resists erosion. As the limestones erode, angular fragments of flint accumulate at the surface, giving the Flint Hills their name.

 

Layers of Ocean Floor

Limestone ranges in color from nearly white to brown. It is hard, and more resistant to erosion than the softer shales, which are usually gray or tan. The alternating beds of limestone and shale produce hillsides with a terraced appearance. Many of the limestone layers create notable benches on the hillsides; the shales form the steep slopes between the benches. The hills themselves are created by a process called differential erosion. Tougher, more resistant limestones and flint cap the tops of hills, while the land between them has been worn away and slowly removed. The rocks of this area—alternating beds of limestone and shale— were deposited during the Permian Period of geologic history, about 280 million years ago. At that time, the climate here was hot, and the surface was covered by ocean water most of the time. The limestones represent periods when the region’s surface was covered by shallow, tropical oceans which teemed with life; shales represent times when mud was deposited on the ocean floor. Each of these sedimentary rock layers has been named after towns, creeks, or other nearby landmarks; the names are based on the locations where each rock layer was first found and described by geologists.

 

Abundant Fossils

A closer look at the rock reveals many fossils. Most of these marine fossils are invertebrates—animals without backbones—such as corals, clams, snails, bryozoans (colonies of animals resembling sea fans), sea urchins, crinoids (a stalked animal that is distantly related to the starfish and sea urchin), and clam-like animals called brachiopods. All of these organisms at one time lived in a shallow, warm, tropical ocean. Particularly abundant in some limestones are fusilinids—fossils shaped like wheat grains; these were one-celled animals that floated in the water. When they died, their skeletons drifted to the bottom of the ocean and were preserved in the lime mud of the ocean floor. These lime muds eventually became limestone. Fusilinids can be seen in many of the limestone blocks used for building on the preserve.

 

Please feel free to post any pictures you took on this magnificent rock formation. It is one of Mother's Nature open outdoors classroom.

 

To receive credit for this earthcache:

1. Using the graphic on the right and facing the layered wall, please name the layers of limestone and shale from top to bottom. How many layers can you see and count?

2. Standing up at the exact coordinates of the cache give me an estimated height of the layered wall.

3. Standing at the same exact location look at the ground. Walk away from the layered wall to the lower layer on the east side of the road, where you are parked. What are the two colors of rocks and the color of the ground that you can distinguish?

4. Name the top layer that you were standing on at the coordinates and the bottom layer.

* Please email the answer to these questions (using my profile link) - do not post the answers in your log.

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