From Precambrian Rift Volcanoes to the Mississippian Shelf Margins: Geological Field Excursions in the Ozark Mountains
Despite a long history of geologic investigations in the Ozarks, new studies and analyses continue to elucidate our understanding of the complex interconnection between the basement, extensive carbonate platforms, structural overprinting, mineralization, karstification, and hydrology. This guidebook volume highlights a few of these aspects as well as the connection to culture, history, and economic development of the Ozarks region.
Civil War and cultural geology of southwestern Missouri, part 1: The geology of Wilson’s Creek Battlefield and the history of stone quarrying and stone use
-
Published:January 01, 2010
-
CiteCitation
Joseph T. Hannibal, Kevin R. Evans, 2010. "Civil War and cultural geology of southwestern Missouri, part 1: The geology of Wilson’s Creek Battlefield and the history of stone quarrying and stone use", From Precambrian Rift Volcanoes to the Mississippian Shelf Margins: Geological Field Excursions in the Ozark Mountains, Kevin R. Evans, James S. Aber
Download citation file:
- Share
Abstract
This field trip provides an overview of geological features in southwestern Missouri that are related to the American Civil War and to human culture. This includes the geology and history of the Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield (where the second important battle of the American Civil War was fought on 10 August 1861), Zágonyi’s Charge (25 October 1861), the Battle of Springfield (8 January 1863), and the gravestones and monuments of the National Cemetery in Springfield in which many of those who fought at Wilson’s Creek and other Civil War conflicts are buried. Other stops include the Springfield Underground and the quarries and facilities at what was once the town of Phenix (which, along with Carthage, Missouri, was the home of some of the largest dimension-stone quarries west of the Mississippi River); and a reconstructed mill site in Point Lookout, just south of Branson. Most of the field trip involves outcrops, quarries, and bedrock composed of the Mississippian Burlington-Keokuk limestones (undivided), providing numerous chances to examine outcrops and products made of limestone and chert.
- areal geology
- Burlington Limestone
- Carboniferous
- construction materials
- dimension stone
- field trips
- Greene County Missouri
- guidebook
- history
- human activity
- Keokuk Limestone
- limestone deposits
- Lower Mississippian
- military geology
- Mississippian
- Missouri
- North America
- Osagian
- outcrops
- Ozark Mountains
- Paleozoic
- quarries
- road log
- Springfield Missouri
- United States
- wars
- southwestern Missouri
- Civil War
- Wilson's Creek Battlefield