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Open: Things to do... Jane
Addams Trail Photo Gallery This trail is part
of Winner of the 2003 Coalition of Recreational Trails Award for construction and design. For more information contact: Freeport/Stephenson
County Convention
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Trail History Geology A trip along the Jane Addams Trail can be an exercise in time travel if one takes the time to learn a bit about the geology along the route. The rock layers are topographic features exposed along the route that can tell us a lot about some of the events that happened in the distant past, long before any Native American or European settlers arrived in the area. Well start with the bedrock. Two major sedimentary units are encountered as one travels north from Freeport: the Galena Dolomite and the Platteville Dolomite. These are arranged in layer cake fashion with the Galena above the Platteville, but the cake has been gently tilted by the uplift of the Wisconsin arch. The relationship between the layers is shown in the cross section below:
The angle of tilt is actually less than one degree and has been exaggerated for the cross section. As erosion has leveled out the surface, progressively deeper layers are exposed farther south. North of Monroe the St. Peter Sandstone is exposed, and the deeper Cambrian Sandstones provide the bedrock into which the Wisconsin River has carved the famous Dells. The St. Petere Sandstone, Platteville Dolomite and Galena Dollomite tell a story of a gradually changing environment in the Midwest during the Middle Ordovician Period (~ 450 million years ago). The St. Peter is the oldest (since it is lowest in the section) so we'll begin there. St. Peter Sandstone The St. Peter Sandstone was probably deposited in a beach or very shallow,
nearshore environment. At the time this sand was deposited, the Upper
Midwest was apparently a nearly level plane that sloped very gently to
the southeast. As sea level gradually rose during the middle to late Ordovician
Period, the shoreline slowly migrated from southern Illinois to Minnesota.
The extreme purity of the sand is the result of a long period of washing
around in the surf, with most of the clay and other impurities being washed
out to sea. Fossils are rare in the St. Peter; most shells and other material
that could have been fossilized were ground away in the surf. Platteville Dolomite While bryozoans built much of the reef, their skeletons were rather delicate and often were broken down into a limey silt that gradually accumulated on the sea floor. The limey ooze gradually buried other shells that fell to the bottom. The most abundant fossils in the Platteville Dolomite are those of a group of clam-like creatures called brachiopods. These animals, whose descendants still thrive in modern seas, live attached to the sea floor. They feed by opening their shells and waving a feathery arm through the water to catch any food that drifts by. Other fossils in the Platteville include snails, trilobites (rare) and crinoids, whose stems look like tiny vertebrae. The main predators of the Ordovician seas were nautiloids, tentacled relatives of squids and octopie who lived in long, tapered shells and moved through the water by jet propulsion. Most of the creatures that inhabited the Ordovician sea produced shells of calcium carbonate, and it is the accumulation of these shells, or microscopic fragments of the shells, that produces limestone. With time, however, limestone can be altered. In the laboratory, limestone which is subjected to seepage and infiltration by seawater over a long period of time gradually alters to another type of rock called dolomite or dolostone. In the reaction, some of the calcium in the limestone is replaced by magnesium to produce the mineral dolomite. Most of the Platteville formation has undergone this transformation to dolomite. Galena Dolomite The Galena contains a very different fossil assemblage than the Platteville.
Bryozoans and brachiopods are rare or absent, while a peculiar fossil
called Receptaculites is abundant. This fossil resembles honeycomb, but
it is believed to have been produced by a species of colonial blue-green
algea. Snail fossils found in the Galena formation support the idea that
Receptaculites was an algae, since snails feed on algae. The change in
faunas between the Platteville and the Galena is probably due to a change
in wtaer depth. As sea level rose, brachiopods and bryozoans gradually
died out, while mats of Receptaculites covered the dimly-lit sea floor. Landscape evolution after the Ordovician By the Triassic period (250 million years ago) the upper Midwest was just about all dry land. While dinosaurs undoubtedly roamed over Illinois, they did so on a land surface several hundred feet above the one we currently tread. Any fossils or other relics they may have left were long ago eroded, ground to sand and clay, and washed out to sea along with the eroding bedrock. As the landscape of the upper Midwest was eroded away, rivers carved deep valleys into the surface. The valleys of Richland Creek and the Pecatonica River were nearly 100 feet deeper just before glaciation than they are at present. But during glacial advances of the Pleistocene Epoch of the last two million years, much sediment accumulated in the valleys. As the ice advanced from the east, it blocked the flow of the Pecatonica. A large lake, called Lake Silveria, occupied portions of the valleys of the Pecatonica, Yellow Creek and Richland Creek. Over the span of several centuries, this sediment filled the valleys to their present level. A brief surge of the ice during the Illinoisian glacial advance saw the glacier spread as far west as Stockton, Illinois. But after the ice melted away the streams, with a few exceptions, resumed their old courses atop their thick valley fills. One notable exception is at Buena Vista, where the Pre-glacial Richland Creek took a broad bend about a mile to the North and West of its present course. The ancestral stream course was apparently blocked by sediment and ice for a period after the glacier melted away from the region, and a narrow gorge was eroded through a spur of rock at the present site of the village. |
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