Breakneck Cache

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This topic contains 1 reply, has 2 voices, and was last updated by  Lostby7 18 years, 1 month ago.

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  • #1725391

    djwini
    Participant


    GC1C8E Breakneck Cache
    Not reading the cache description left us in for a wonderful surprise. this cache is located in the Waupun area. we parked at N43 38.806 W88 34.932.
    walked in from the trail, and wow, this fantastic view. if you are in the area, don’t skip this one.
    The Niagara Escarpment is a 40- to 100-foot cliff that passes through the eastern third of our state, continues north of several of the Great Lakes, sometimes under water, into Canada, and down to Niagara Falls. From there it enters the Appalachians, where it is crumpled and folded, then goes south into Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and back through Illinois into Wisconsin.

    This cliff is the edge of a vast sedimentary rock layer, one of several in the layer cake of sediments that formed on the bottom of ancient seas. This layer is like a giant saucer, with its western edge in Wisconsin, and its eastern edge at Niagara Falls. Some layers were composed of erodible material, others of limey material from the bodies of marine life. The Ledge is a hard limestone layer called Niagara dolomite, and it contains fossils of the simple life forms existing at that time. The Ledge is 400 million years old. The Rockies are only 70 million, and the Appalachians 300 million.

    When the seas receded, the edges of the layers were exposed and most of them weathered into obscurity. The Niagara layer has retained its cliff edge because the layer beneath it is soft shale, which erodes quickly, leaving the dolomite overhanging. The dolomite eventually breaks off again and again, forming a new cliff face each time — just as it has at Niagara Falls, where the process is so dramatic that it can be measured in miles per century.

    One other thing is responsible for the look of the Ledge: Ice. Mile-thick moving ice of successive glaciers obliterated the cliffs in some places and created huge fissures and crevasses in others. Although the cliff would be higher and sharper today without the glacial bulldozing, the crevasses and caves are left as great places to explore.

    #1878704

    Lostby7
    Participant


    Not to steal thunder here or get off topic too much but if you are interested in the Niagara Escarpment I have an Earth Cache featuring it near Eagle.
    The Niagara Escarpment: Brady’s Rock GC150BF
    Be careful though you might learn something.

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