Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 189 pages of information about Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills.

Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 189 pages of information about Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills.

Professor Swallow, in his Missouri Geological Survey Reports I. and II., 1853 and 1854, says:  “Caves, natural bridges and subterranean streams occur in the valley of the Osage and its tributaries.”  The same authority of forty years ago also mentions that “Some of the grandest scenery in the State is produced by the high castellated and mural bluffs of this (Third Magnesian Limestone) Formation, on the Niangua and the Osage.”  Another reference to the scenery on these rivers describes it as “Wild and grand, beautiful and unique;” with “gaudy-colored bluffs.”  In the section on building materials he remarks:  “One of the most desirable of the Missouri marbles is in the Third Magnesian Limestone on the Niangua.  It is fine-grained, crystalline, silico-magnesian limestone of a light drab, slightly tinged with peach-blossom, and beautifully clouded with the same hue or flesh color.  It is twenty feet thick and crops out in the bluffs.  This marble is rarely surpassed in the qualities which fit it for ornamental architecture.”

The Ozarks in the extreme southern portion of the state are even less known to the world, but the scenery is grand, the climate delightful, and the caves worthy of a visit for themselves alone.  The State of Missouri being one third larger than England, and of equal size to Switzerland, Holland, Belgium and Denmark combined, it is not surprising that interesting discoveries are still to be expected.

The climate is so varied on account of the range in latitude and altitude, and the natural resources are so great, the claim has been made that if the State were surrounded by an impassable wall, its citizens need not be deprived of any article necessary to a refined and luxurious mode of living:  and according to Mr. Henry Gannett in “The Building of a Nation,” the population in 1890 was 73.42 per cent. native whites of native parents, the colored a little less than 6 per cent., and nearly two-thirds of the balance, native born of parents, one or both of whom were foreign.

Although the Ozark region has not yet received sufficient attention to dull its charm for the explorer, the fact has been established that its earliest sedimentary rocks are of the Cambrian Age and still occupy mainly the position in which they were originally deposited.  Therefore we need not be surprised to discover that some, at least, of the excavations are proportionately ancient; and that the Natural Bridges are the last remaining positive evidence of their former existence and final collapse.  That the Natural Bridges of Missouri mark the destruction of more ancient caves than the one preserved to geological history by Virginia’s grand attraction, seems quite evident.  The greater age of the rocks indicates the possibility of earlier excavation while their undisturbed position suggests that destruction resulted, not from violent earth movement, but from the slow action of agencies requiring long periods of time.

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Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.