Yellowstone National Park - Canyon

The specifics of the geology of the canyon are not well understood, except
that it is an erosional feature rather than the result of glaciation. After the
caldera eruption of about 600,000 years ago, the area was covered by a series of
lava flows. The area was also faulted by the doming action of the caldera before
the eruption. The site of the present canyon, as well as any previous canyons,
was probably the result of this faulting, which allowed erosion to proceed at an
accelerated rate. The area was also covered by the glaciers that followed the
volcanic activity. Glacial deposits probably filled the canyon at one time, but
have since been eroded away, leaving little or no evidence of their presence.
The canyon below the Lower Falls was at one time the site of a geyser basin that
was the result of rhyolite lava flows, extensive faulting, and heat beneath the
surface (related to the hot spot). No one is sure exactly when the geyser basin
was formed in the area, although it was probably present at the time of the last
glaciation. The chemical and heat action of the geyser basin caused the rhyolite
rock to become hydrothermally altered, making it very soft and brittle and more
easily erodible (sometimes likened to baking a potato). Evidence of this thermal
activity still exists in the canyon in the form of geysers and hot springs that
are still active and visible. The Clear Lake area (Clear Lake is fed by hot
springs) south of the canyon is probably also a remnant of this activity.
According to Ken Pierce, U.S. Geological Survey geologist, at the end of the
last glacial period, about 14,000 to 18,000 years ago, ice dams formed at the
mouth of Yellowstone Lake. When the ice dams melted, a great volume of water was
released downstream causing massive flash floods and immediate and catastrophic
erosion of the present-day canyon. These flash floods probably happened more
than once. The canyon is a classic V-shaped valley, indicative of river-type
erosion rather than glaciation. The canyon is still being eroded by the
Yellowstone River.
The colors in the canyon are also a result of hydrothermal alteration. The
rhyolite in the canyon contains a variety of different iron compounds. When the
old geyser basin was active, the "cooking" of the rock caused chemical
alterations in these iron compounds. Exposure to the elements caused the rocks
to change colors. The rocks are, in effect, oxidizing; the canyon is rusting.
The colors indicate the presence or absence of water in the individual iron
compounds. Most of the yellows in the canyon are the result of iron present in
the rock rather than sulfur, as many people think.
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