Age of the Badlands Rocks
Although the formations of the badlands are young as
compared to some rocks such as the granite in the Black Hills or the
limestone in which Wind Cave is formed, they are ancient indeed when
compared to human history. The geologic period (Tertiary) in which they
originated began about 63 million years ago, and the Oligocene epoch of
this period began about 36 million years ago and lasted for about 11
million years.
Most laymen are bewildered when confronted with a
statement that a certain exposure of rock is 36 million years old. How
do we known the age of anything so remote from human experience? The
geologist has several ways of determining comparative ages; some are
fairly accurate and some admittedly less so. The most accurate
determinations are made when the rocks contain radioactive elements.
Certain elements, after formation in the earth, break down into other
elements at known rates of speed. By carefully controlled chemical and
physical techniques, the amount of disintegration can be determined and
the age of the mineral computed.
The most reliable estimates place the age of the
badlands formations at about 36 million yearsan almost
incomprehensible figure. Try to visualize it this way: The width of this
mark / is 1/64 of an inch. Let it represent 5,000 years, or about the
sum total of recorded human history. Now place 7,200 of these lines side
by side to make a solid black bar about 112 inches long and you will
have a graphic comparison of the age of recorded history and the
approximate age of the layers of rock in the badlands.
The first fossil described from the
badlandsa fragment of the jawbone of a titanothere, a
rhinoceros-like animal that lived here some 30 million years
ago
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GEOLOGIC TIME CHART
Era | Duration, millions of years |
Period | Duration, millions of years |
Cumulative total, millions of years | Remarks |
CENOZOIC (Recent Life) Age of Mammals | 58 |
QUARTERNARY: |
RECENT EPOCH |
|
|
The atomic age. |
PLEISTOCENE EPOCH | 1 | 1 |
Continental glaciers of North America. Man appeared. |
TERTIARY: |
PLIOCENE EPOCH | 12 | 13 |
Modern animals and plants became abundant. |
MIOCENE EPOCH | 12 | 25 |
|
OLIGOCENE EPOCH | 11 | 36 |
Badlands rocks laid down. |
EOCENE EPOCH | 22 | 58 |
Ancestral horse appeared. |
PALEOCENE | 5 | 63 |
|
MESOZOIC (Middle Life) Age of Reptiles. | 172 |
|
|
| Devils Tower formed. Rocky Mountains and Black Hills
uplifted. |
CRETACEOUS | 72 | 135 |
Culmination of the dinosaurs. |
JURASSIC | 46 | 181 |
|
TRIASSIC | 49 | 230 |
|
PALEOZOIC (Early Life) Age of Invertebrate Life | 370 |
PERMIAN | 50 | 280 |
|
PENNSYLVANIAN MISSISSIPPIAN | 65 | 345 |
Great coal beds formedJewel Cave and Wind Cave rocks laid down. |
DEVONIAN | 60 | 405 |
Fishes and invertebrate animals dominant. |
SILURIAN | 20 | 425 |
|
ORDOVICIAN | 75 | 500 |
|
CAMBRIAN | 100 | 600? |
|
PRECAMBRIAN (First Life Appeared) Beginning of the Earth. |
2,400+ | NOT SUBDIVIDED HERE |
|
|
|
|
| 3,000+ |
Mostly granite. Mount Rushmore figures carved in rocks of this age. |
|
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