Glaciated Region—Rocks and Minerals
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Glaciated Region--Rocks and Minerals
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Download fact sheet on the rocks and minerals of the Glaciated Region.
Loess. A widespread, fine-grained blanket deposit, loess consists predominantly of silt. Silt, as geologists define it, is a rock fragment or mineral particle smaller than a very fine sand grain and larger than clay: its diameter is between 1/16 mm and 1/256 mm. Windblown silt deposited during the Pleistocene is known as loess.
As glaciers advanced, they pulverized rocks and sediments in their path. As they melted, this pulverized rock, or silt, was deposited on the floodplains by streams coming from the melting ice sheet. Temperature differences between the snow-covered regions to the north and the bare ground to the south may have created large differences in atmospheric pressure, resulting in strong winds capable of moving large amounts of silt.
Thick deposits of loess, more than a hundred feet thick in places, occur along the bluffs of the Missouri River. The loess in this region is typically a yellowish-buff, porous silt that crops out with steep faces along hillsides and valley walls. Small, white shells of snails also may be found in the loess.
In northeastern Kansas a very rich soil has developed on the loess, especially in Brown and Doniphan counties and along the bluffs of the Missouri River as far south as Kansas City. Loess hills in Doniphan County are some of the highest in the state. One of these, Lookout Mountain north of Sparks, is more than 350 feet above the floodplain of the Missouri River.
Glacial erratics. The boulders and pebbles from local and distant rocks that were carried by the glacier are of many different types, including limestone, sandstone, quartzite, granite, and basalt. Rocks that have been transported into an area from far away are called erratics. Among the glacial erratics in northeastern Kansas, quartzite is one of the most common. Quartzite, a metamorphic rock, is quartz sandstone that is so thoroughly cemented with silica (SiO2) that the rock breaks through the grains as easily as around them. It is harder than sandstone and can not be scratched by a knife. The quartzite boulders in the Glaciated Region are known as Sioux quartzite because they come from the area where Sioux quartzite crops out in the area around Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Large quartzite boulder in Marshall County.
Glaciated Region--Intro |
Glaciated Region--Rocks and Minerals
Glaciated Region--Places to Visit | Other regions
General geology, rocks and minerals, and places to visit in the state's physiographic regions (including PDF factsheets for downloading)
Information about common Kansas fossils
Photos and descriptions of sites of geologic (and other) interest in Kansas
Descriptions of various rocks and minerals found in Kansas, including mineral ID tables and hardness scale
Overviews of various geology topics, ranging from Earth's age to the state's mining history
Online guidebooks, descriptions, and photos from KGS public field trips in Kansas