I like to periodically recheck various sites along the Mississippi corridor, to see how the elements are treating them, if there have been any major rock falls, damage from downed trees, changes in usage, etc. One of the places I get to more frequently than others is
Shadow Falls Park. It has an informal reputation for collecting and is a place with soil on steep slopes (plus access is good and I like going there).
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Here's the trail on the south side of the valley past the falls (which are essentially just to the right and a little below the vantage point of this photo). |
Erosion may not be immediately evident if you don't have something to measure the loss of sediment, but in places with tree roots near the surface on the slopes it's easy to see how running water and gravity have done their work.
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Almost a staircase of roots. |
The usual array of lower Decorah fossils was present, in small chunks of rock and loose. It seemed to be a particularly good day for observing
strophomenids (in the hash plates, primarily; they tend to break up otherwise). One example in the photo below is probably
Rafinesquina, based on the thinness of the valve. This genus is named after Rafinesque, who we
met last week and had a much more substantial career than getting into arguments about sloths. Another nice piece observed was a
Bumastoides pygidium.
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A. Probable Rafinesquina valve. B. Bumastoides pygidium |
In one area I observed two pieces of a larger specimen of
Rauffella palmipes. This is all catch-and-release, of course!
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Two fragments of a large Rauffella palmipes. |
Shadow Falls includes not only the falls, but a long valley oriented east-west with its head near but not quite reaching Cretin Avenue. I haven't spent much time in the valley above the falls because the area right above the falls tends to turn into a muddy swamp, but it's been a dry spring. The creek feeding the falls is in a very deep valley for its size, but would have been somewhat bigger in the days before sewers and roads.
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The creek valley above Shadow Falls... |
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...opens up into this near its head. |
There are several large fossiliferous blocks along the creek that include crinoid columnals notably larger in diameter than the run-of-the-mill
lower Decorah columnals (note that the photo in the linked post is biased to larger, more photogenic columnals). The obvious guess is that they were brought to the area by glaciers and represent a different part of the stratigraphic column, say the upper Decorah or one of the overlying Ordovician formations that have been stripped from the area.
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Large columnals |
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