The very last WWII LST still in it's original configuration. LST Memorial 325
Thanks for the post!!!!....see there is more than corn in Indiana.....
The very last WWII LST still in it's original configuration. LST Memorial 325
Geological sites in Indiana? Not many, but the impact site in Kentland is certainly one of them. Overturned strata for the win!
Unfortunately, there's not really much you can actually "see" due to the site being a monstrous crushed stone quarry. But some quick Googling of the subject will bring up numerous hits to peruse.
Also of note in IN: World-famous museum-quality crinoid fossils from Montgomery County.
Plenty of karst features in Indiana as well, but gotta get to US 50 and south in order to partake (generally speaking)
Other than those few things, Indiana is, generally speaking, rather geologically boring.
I disagree.....Southern Indiana is a geological marvel.....
Falls of the Ohio State Park
IMHO of course but I am a proud river rat/hill jack from way back....
Hey, I've been a rock hound and a fossil buff since I could walk and pick up rocks...
But I'll stick with my original assessment. Indiana is pretty geologically boring.
My kid found a couple chunks of flint on my place last summer..
Betcha a dollar it's chert.
It takes a canoe to get there, but there's a million dollars of old classic cars stacked like cordwood along a stretch of White River south of Martinsville to stop erosion. It was surreal floating by all of them.
It takes a canoe to get there, but there's a million dollars of old classic cars stacked like cordwood along a stretch of White River south of Martinsville to stop erosion. It was surreal floating by all of them.