Governor Dodge State Park
Geology
Most
of Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, and Minnesota once looked much the same
until a series of four glaciers inched their way across the northern United
States. Massive sheets of ice "peeled off" hilltops and filled
in valleys from Canada to Kansas, leaving a vast, flat expanse in their
wake.
Due to certain geological "quirks of fate," southwestern Wisconsin
was bypassed and encircled by the four glaciers. The area, therefore,
stands as an "island" of hills and valleys amid surrounding
plains.
The term "Driftless Area" is given to this region because it
is devoid of drift or the accumulated rock and soil left by retreating
glaciers. More than 5,000 acres of this unique "island" make
up Governor Dodge State Park. As you make your way through this magnificent
park, you make your way through time itself.
The beautiful sandstone bluffs, such as the one pictured here, date back
450 million years, to a time when vast, warm seas covered the area. These
seas deposited sand, layer upon layer, and then retreated. Wind and water
began to carve into the ancient, flat seabedscentury after century,
carving ever-deeper valleys.
Today, you can stand within those valleys and view the parks many
bluffs, seeing for yourself the layers of ancient sandpages of time
locked within rock.
For more information, ask Governor Dodge State Park, (608) 935-2315.
Last Revised: Tuesday January 03 2012
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