User:IveGoneAway/sandbox/Kaw Lake (proglacial lake)
Kaw Lake refers to a proglacial lake that formed during the Pleistocene when glaciers dammed the Kansas River, the river itself nicknamed "The Kaw". A number of landforms record the influence of the lake, the glacier, and the glacier's outflow;
- rolling low hills of loess-like red clay, outwash gravels, and polished red boulders of Sioux Quartzite north of the Kansas River in Pottawatomie and Shawnee counties,
- Sioux Quartzite moraines on top of the Permian limestone ridges south of the river and in the basin of Shunganunga Creek south of Topeka,
- river systems just south those ridges that parallel the Kaw that for a time carried the displaced flow of the whole of the Missouri River watershed; particularly Mission Creek, Shunganunga Creek, and the historic Wakarusa River),
- and red loess lake terraces in and around Junction City, Ogden, and Manhattan.
Exploration
[edit]Approaching the Kansas River crossing at Cross Creek from the northeast, the 1724 Bourgmont Expedition to the Padouca described "reddish, marbled" boulders protruding above the short buffalo grass, making the first recorded description of the glaciated terrain along that segment of the Kansas River.[1][2]
Within the remainder of the 18th century, the Kansa people relocated from their previous main settlement on the Missouri river to the middle and upper Kansa River. With the center of the population in the vicinity of Buffalo Mound, a sacred landmark in the midst of the migrant Sioux Quartzite boulder field, the community developed a spiritual connection to the stones that modern science would classify as glacial erratics.
Further reading
[edit]- 1892: Robert Hay. "Some Characteristics of the Glaciated Area of North-Eastern Kansas" (PDF). Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. Vol. 13 (1891 - 1892). Kansas Academy of Science: 104–106. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
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- Hay described the glaciated area.
- 1896: B. B. Smyth. "The Buried Moraine of the Shunganunga" (PDF). Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. 1895–1896. Kansas Academy of Science: 87–104. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
- Smyth named the proglacial lake formed from the dammed Kansas River.
- "Small icebergs floating in these waters account for an occasional boulder and a little drift material south of the moraine."
- 1916: J. E. Todd. "History of Kaw Lake" (PDF). Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. 28 Jan. 14, 1916 — Jan. 13, 1917. Kansas Academy of Science: 187–199. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- 1987: Wakefield Dort, Jr. (1987). "Salient aspects of the terminal zone of continental glaciation in Kansas". Guidebook Series. 33rd Field Conference, Midwest Friends of the Pleistocene (5). Kansas Geological Survey. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
- 1987: Wakefield Dort, Jr. "AMQUA Post-meeting Field Trip 3: Multiple Pre-Illinoian Tills and Associated Sediments and Paleosols, Northeastern Kansas and Central Missouri Part I: Kansas". Guidebook of the 18th Biennial Meeting of the American Quaternary Association. American Quaternary Association. Kansas Geological Survey. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
The former existence of this glacier-dammed lake was recognized by Hay (1893) and named Kaw Lake by Smyth (1898).
- 1998: Jane E. Denne, Rachel E. Miller, Lawrence R. Hathaway, Howard G. O'Connor, and William C. Johnson. "Hydrogeology and Geochemistry of Glacial Deposits in Northeastern Kansas". Bulletin (229). Kansas Geological Survey. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
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- 2008: Shane A. Lyle (April 2008). "Glaciers in Kansas" (PDF). Public Information Circular (PIC 28). Kansas Geological Survey. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- 2008: Charles G. Oviatt (2008). "Sediments of Kaw Lake, a Glacier-Dammed Lake in Kansas". Joint Meeting of The Geological Society of America, Soil Science Society of America, American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies with the Gulf Coast Section of SEPM. Geological Society of America. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
References
[edit]- ^ "1724 Journal Entries for Éttienne de Veniard, sieur de Bourgmont" (PDF). nebraskastudies.org. History Nebraska. p. 2.
Along the streams we find also pieces of slate, and on the prairie some reddish, marbled stones that protrude one, two, and three feet out of the ground. Some are more than six feet in diameter.
French historians believe the journal was written by mining engineer Philippe de La Renaudière. - ^ Rex C. Buchanan; James R. McCauley (1987). Roadside Kansas. University Press of Kansas (Kansas Geological Survey). p. 115–116. ISBN 978-0-7006-0322-0.
Interstate 70 327.5 ... Early explorers often commented on these glacial erratics. In fact one of the first recorded references to Kansas geology came from the Frenchman Étienne Veniard de Bourgmont, ... In his description of the reddish marble, the explorer was almost certainly referring to the quartzite glacial erratics.