Red Rocks in Glacier National Park

Red Rocks in Glacier National Park

Steep red mountainsides and glacial lakes are two of the distinguishing features of Montana’s Glacier National Park. This satellite image shows Upper Two Medicine Lake (center) surrounded by Mt. Helen, Mt. Rockwell, and Lone Walker Mountain (clockwise from upper left). The red rocks are part of the Grinnell Formation, a stack of lightly metamorphosed sedimentary rocks up to 790 meters (2,600 feet) thick. Iron oxide (rust) in the rocks creates the red hue.

Above the Grinnell Formation, visible on the summit of Mt. Helen, lies the tan Empire Formation. The rocks of both the Grinnell and Empire formations are Precambrian in age—they formed during the Middle Proterozoic Era, more than 1 billion years ago. Despite their great age, the rocks contain fossils, including traces of algae and worm burrows.

This photo-like image was acquired by GeoEye’s Ikonos satellite on August 26, 2001. The satellite’s very high-resolution sensor [4 meters (13 feet) per pixel in color] allows very fine details—like individual trees—to be seen from space.

Geologically recent events sculpted the rocks of Glacier National Park into sharp mountain peaks and steep-walled valleys. During the last ice age, which lasted from 100,000 to 10,000 years ago, glaciers covered most of northern Montana. These rivers of ice cut into pre-existing streambeds, carving valleys with nearly vertical walls. Later erosion in the walls, primarily due to the freezing and thawing of water in rock crevices, filled the edges of the valleys with sloping piles of rock and sand. This type of erosion results in valleys with a u-shaped cross section. The melting glaciers left behind glacial till—ground up rock—on the valley floor, and numerous glacial lakes, such as Upper Two Medicine Lake, which fill the basins recently occupied by the glaciers.

NASA image by Robert Simmon, based on data ©2001 GeoEye, archived by the UMD Global Land Cover Facility. Caption by Robert Simmon.

© All Rights Reserved: Use of IKONOS, GeoEye, QuickBird and WorldView imagery must be coordinated with Maxar.

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