Secondary Features
At some stage after the badlands rocks had been laid
down, the upper exposed part was subjected to drying and, as a result, a
series of nearly vertical cracks or fissures developed. Later,
percolating ground water dissolved silica from the surrounding rocks and
deposited it in these fissures. The most common mineral thus produced
was chalcedonya hard, brittle, waxy, bluish-tinged substance that
strongly resists erosion. The soft surface rocks have been worn away and
the hard, thin, knifelike ridges (dikes) stand out in sharp relief. In
some places they can be traced for considerable distances. Some of the
fissures were filled with softer material of contrasting color, such as
brown silt or white volcanic ash. Where the filling
is softer than the enclosing rock, erosion often produces a slight
trough along the line of the dike.
In places, very thin cracks have been filled with
chalcedony, which has later weathered out in thin, flat fragments.
Indians often worked one edge of these flintlike natural blades into
cutting tools, which have become known as "badlands knives" because they
are found only in this region.
Erosion carves the badlands and then destroys them
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At certain levels in the badlands rocks, small,
roughly spherical cavities developed, probably as a result of dissolving
away of materials. Later, percolating ground waters lined these
cavities with chalcedony. In many instances, silica crystals (quartz)
grew inward from the cavity walls, sometimes completely filling them.
These spherical nodules are called geodes. In some parts of the United
States they occur in sizes as large as a basketball or even larger.
Badlands geodes are quite smallabout the size of a lemon. Since
the silica is relatively resistant, the geodes wash out of the soft
clays and tumble to the base of the cliffsin considerable numbers.
Sometimes the quartz crystals do not completely fill
the geodes and, occasionally, a crystal becomes detached and is loose
within the cavity. When such a geode is shaken, a harsh, rattling sound
is heardhence the name rattlerock.
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