|
Mississippi State Geological Survey Bulletin 28
The Geologic History of the Vicksburg National Military Park Area
|
DESCRIPTIVE GEOLOGY
In the lower part of Mint Spring Bayou, in reality a
valley, at northern edge of the City of Vicksburg, the stream has
uncovered nine or more feet of gray marl which is a slightly indurated
or consolidated mass of marine shell fragments. It has been named the
Mint Spring marl by C. Wythe Cook.1
1Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 8, No. 7, p. 195, 1918.
Directly overlying the Mint Spring marl is an
interval of 12.8 feet of limestone extending to the brink of the falls.
It, too, is a gray marl not fully indurated, but possibly sufficiently so to be called a
limestone. It belongs to the basal part of the Glendon formation.
Section of the waterfalls in Mint Spring Bayou
| | Feet | Feet |
Glendon formation | | 12.8 |
| Limestone, gray, or marl, indurated, forming the most nearly vertical
part of the rock beneath the falls | 10.3 | |
| Limestone, gray, or marl, indurated, forming also a part of the nearly
vertical portion of the falls | 2.5 | |
Mint Spring marl | | 9.0 |
| Marl, gray, only slightly indurated | 9.0 | |
| Base of exposure is 8 or 12 feet above water level in pool | | |
These layers of limestone in the basal part of the
Glendon formation are harder than the other beds of the Glendon or of
the other formations of this vicinity. Consequently, they stand out in
the steep parts of the valleys, whereas the less indurated beds are
commonly covered with mantle rock. For this reason the limestone is
exposed in the bluffs of the old Mississippi, north of the business
section of the city.
Perhaps the most readily accessible section of fairly
well exposed beds in the Vicksburg region is along the side of the
roadway extending from Waltersville southward up the hill past the north
wall of the National Cemetery. It is given in details in the following
section.
Section of the beds along the Waltersville-National Cemetery Road
| | Feet | Feet |
Loess | | 21.0 |
| Loess, grayish-buff, contains Gastropod shells
and breaks into vertical columns | 21.0 | |
Citronelle (provisionally referred
to this formation) | | 14.0 |
| Clay, pinkish-gray, tenaceous, which has sand and
gravel in its upper inch. Both its upper and lower contacts are
irregular, and, hence, its thickness is not uniform.
Top surface has slickensides | 3.0 | |
| Gravel and sand mixed in the most confusing
way, after the manner of the Citronelle, to which it is provisionally
referred. Both upper and lower contacts are irregular, and,
consequently, its thickness is not uniform | 11.0 | |
Catahoula formation | | 26.0 |
| Sand and clay in rather indefinite layers. Some of the clay is light in
color, and some of it, especially in the basal parts, contains dark
films of lignite or lignitic clay. It is slightly covered at the base | 26.0 | |
Byram marl | | 44.5 |
| Marl, gray, certain beds of which are extremely fossiliferous,
especially in the lower part of the interval | 37.5 | |
| Marl, bluish-gray. The
top and basal intervals, each of 1.5 feet, are exposed, the median
interval of 4.0 feet is covered | 7.0 | |
Glendon formation | | 17.0 |
| Limestone at top, which forms the small falls along the roadway. The
lower part is marl 3.5 Interval, covered | 5.5 | |
| Limestone at top,
which forms the small falls in the small gulley opposite the roadway
bridge. The rest is fossiliferous marl | 8.0 | |
Undetermined | | 3.0 |
| Interval, covered to Washington Street and Illinois Central Railroad
tracks | 3.0 | |
Although neither the Mint Spring falls section nor
the Waltersville-National Cemetery road section extends down to clearly
exposed beds of the Forest Hill formation of the Vicksburg series of
rocks, exposures elsewhere show the Forest Hill formation to consist of
cross-bedded siliceous sand and some clay. It also contains lenses of
lignite and lignitic clay.
state/ms/msgs-bul-28/sec1.htm
Last Updated: 18-Jan-2007
|