Yellowstone National Park - Tower Roosevelt

The geology of the Tower district is incredibly varied. Major landforms are
expressions of geologic events that helped shape much of the Yellowstone area.
Absaroka volcanics, glaciation, and erosion have left features as varied as
Specimen Ridge"s petrified trees to the gorges along the Yellowstone River"s
Black Canyon and the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone.
Mt. Washburn and the Absaroka Range are both remnants of ancient volcanic events
that formed the highest peaks in the Tower District. Ancient eruptions, perhaps
45 to 50 million years ago, buried the forests of Specimen Ridge in ash and
debris flows. The columnar basalt formations near Tower Fall, the volcanic
breccias of the "towers" themselves, and numerous igneous outcrops all reflect
the district"s volcanic history.
Later, glacial events scoured the landscape, exposing the stone forests and
leaving evidence of their passage throughout the district. The glacial ponds and
huge boulders (erratics) between the Lamar and Yellowstone rivers are remnants
left by the retreating glaciers. Lateral and terminal moraines are common in
these areas. Such evidence can also be found in the Hellroaring and Slough creek
drainages, on Blacktail Plateau, and in the Lamar Valley.
The eroding power of running water has been at work in the district for many
millions of years. The pinnacles of Tower Fall, the exposed rainbow colors of
the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone at Calcite Springs, and the fearsome gorge
of the Black Canyon all are due, at least in part, to the forces of running
water and gravity.
In the Lamar River Canyon lie exposed outcrops of gneiss and schist which are
among the oldest rocks known in Yellowstone, perhaps more than two billion years
old. Little is known about their origin due to their extreme age. Through time,
heat and pressure have altered these rocks from their original state, further
obscuring their early history. Only in the Gallatin Range are older outcrops
found within the boundaries of the park.
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