Place to see: Badlands, SD, Rapid City, South Dakota, United States

A view without equal

A view without equal

The layers in the landscape are clearly visible in this image. These layers formed over millions of years.

About this place:

Badlands National Park, South Dakota:

For centuries humans have viewed South Dakota's celebrated Badlands with a mix of dread and fascination. The Lakota knew the place as "mako sica". Early French trappers called the area "les mauvaises terres a traverser". Both mean "bad lands." Conservation writer Freeman Tilden described the region as "peaks and valleys of delicately banded colors - colors that shift in the sunshine... and a thousand tints that color charts do not show. In the early morning and evening, when shadows are cast upon the infinite peaks or on a bright moonlit night when the whole region seems a part of another world, the Badlands will be an experience not easily forgotten." Paleontologist Thaddeus Culbertson has another reaction, "Fancy yourself on the hottest day in summer in the hottest spot of such a place without water - without an animal and scarce an insect astir - without a single flower to speak pleasant things to you and you will have some idea of the utter loneliness of the Bad Lands."

I was unprepared for mysterious beauty of the Dakota Bad Lands.... I was in awe of a

landscape unlike any other I have ever encountered anywhere in the world.

Over 11,000 years of human history pales to the eons old paleontological resources. Badlands National Park contains the world's richest Oligocene epoch fossil beds, dating 23 to 35 million years old. The evolution of mammal species such as the horse, sheep, rhinoceros and pig can be studied in the Badlands formations.

Approximately 75 million years ago Earth's climate was warmer than it is now, and a shallow sea covered much of the region we know as the Great Plains. In today's Badlands the bottom of that sea appears as a grayish-black sedimentary rock called the Pierre (pronounced "peer") shale. This layer is a rich source of fossils, creatures sank to the bottom of the sea when they died and over a long course of time became fossils.

The park consists of nearly 244,000 acres of eroded pinnacles and spires blended with the largest, protected mixed grass prairie in the United States. Sixty-four thousand acres are designated official wilderness, and is the site of the reintroduction of the black-footed ferret, the most endangered land mammal in North America. The Stronghold Unit is co-managed with the Oglala Sioux Tribe and includes the sites of 1890's Ghost Dances.

Located inside the park, is the Cedar Pass Lodge & Restaurant, where we found the food and service to be excellent. I would recommend the restaurant with confidence.

Rapid City, South Dakota, US
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Discovered by Mathilda Williams
on 10 November 2007.
462 views.