After a couple of weekends of sickness and all-around crappy weather, Hank, Evelynn and I made our way to Hanging Rock. Hanging Rock is a very small nature preserve, but also a National Natural Landmark! It is a special place to me because it is about 1.5 miles from where I grew up. It was one of the first places that I was allowed to ride my bike to ALONE.
http://www.acreslandtrust.org/templates/System/details.asp?id=44551&PID=701991 |
Hanging Rock is a hundred-foot tall out-cropping of rock overhanging the Wabash River. The cliff is actually part of a silurian reef composed of three different types of rock: dolomite, fossiliferous limestone, and dolomitic siltstone. The silurian reef layer of the earth in this area was depostited during the Paleozoic era, 540,000,000 years ago. (I'm not really this smart...all of this information -and more- is available on a couple of very helpful signs at the preserve.)
While I am quite impatient for trees to begin leafing, this time of year provides an excellent view of Hanging Rock! |
A portion of the "hanging" rock, no longer hanging. |
More sections of Hanging Rock that have fallen into the river over time. |
When the victorious Indian brave came to claim Wy-nu-sa as his bride, she screamed, "I do not love you! You have killed my one true love. I cannot live without him!" And she threw herself over the cliff's edge and joined her true love in the Happy Hunting Grounds. With flashlight under my chin...And it is said that the Indian maiden still lurks among the fallen stones at the base of Hanging Rock, mourning her one true love. And in the darkness of the night, passers by can hear her moaning, "You killed my one true love."
I was really impacted by the massive quantities of exposed root systems I saw at Hanging rock. The effects of rain and wind erosion on plants growing on a nearly vertical surface, I suppose. A little alarming, but simultaneously quite beautiful. I love the twisting, entangling, weaving lines of the roots. It is a tiny peek at the amazing and mysterious root structures hidden below the earth's surface.
I find these intertwining roots symbolic of the tangled heart-strings in Wy-nu-sa's legend.
Did you know that together with their water-dwelling cousins, snails are number two on the list of most species on earth, second only to insects? There are 43,000 snail species living in the sea, in freshwater or on land. Five hundred land species live on North American soil.
One of about 100 snail shells I found in one particular area of the cliff-side. The snail Happy Hunting Ground. |
A snail's shell consists of three layers: 1) the hypostracum, the innermost layer; 2) the ostracum, the middle layer, consisting mostly of calcium carbonate; and 3) the shell skin or periostracum, which is made of a mix of proteins that hold the shell's color. After a snail dies, this layer erodes away, exposing the white or gray color of underlying calcium carbonate. This part becomes food for next year's snails. (Answering my burning question...do new snails "move in" to old, abandoned shells? No. They EAT them.) Again, I am not really this smart. I found this, and a bunch more really interesting snail (and other creatures) information at www.welcomewildlife.com
Finally! At the very end of our hike one of the kids found a sign of spring, albeit tiny! |
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