River Warren Falls
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The River Warren Falls was a massive waterfall on the glacial River Warren initially located in present-day Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. The waterfall was 2,700 feet (820 m) across and 175 feet (53 m) high.[1]
The area now occupied by the Twin Cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis generally consisted of a 155 feet (47 m) thick layer of St. Peter Sandstone, under a 16 feet (4.9 m) thick layer of shale, under a 35 feet (11 m) thick layer of Platteville limestone.[1] These layers were the result of an Ordovician Period sea which covered east-central Minnesota 500 million years ago.[1] The hard limestone cap was formed from fossilized shell fish. About 20,000 years ago, the area was covered by the Superior Lobe of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which left the St. Croix moraine on the Twin Cities as it receded.[1] Later the Grantsburg Sublobe of the Des Moines Lobe also covered the area.[2] Under these vast layers of ice, tunnel valleys were formed, cutting through the limestone layer with tremendous force, to release ice meltwater and glacier effluence.[3] The result was a series of troughs in the limestone, which were filled by glacial till and outwash deposit as the glaciers receded. Sometimes the sediment would be mixed with huge chunks of ice, which would leave voids in the soil, or kettles. These kettles created basins for the lakes of the Twin Cities, such as Harriet and Bde Maka Ska.[3][4] Connecting the city lakes in several north–south arteries are gorges cut through the bedrock, but filled with sand and sediment.
