A one billion year-old unsolved mystery
The Great Unconformity is a mysterious geologic event – it marks a period in Earth’s history where hundreds of millions of years of rock is missing from the geologic record. You can see examples of this phenomenon at locations around the world including the Grand Canyon, and right here at Rainbow Falls, where an almost 500-million-year gap of missing time exists between the Pikes Peak Granite and the overlying Sawatch Formation.
Geologist John Wesley Powell first observed the phenomenon in 1896 as he traveled through the Grand Canyon. What he saw was even more striking than the rocks exposed here at Rainbow Falls. He observed 500-million-year-old beach deposits that had turned to stone overlying 1.7-billion-year-old warped and twisted metamorphic rock, an age difference of 1.2 billion years!
What does this relationship suggest? Both the area around the Grand Canyon and here at Rainbow falls likely experienced a period of mountain uplift during the late Precambrian age, more than 600 million years ago. As the mountains wore down, the whole region was flooded by an ancient sea that first deposited beach sands and then over time thick deposits of limestone like the grayish Manitou Limestone you can see here.
The story being told in the stone
The tumbling water of Fountain Creek might be the star here, but the rocks behind it tell a dramatic story of upheaval, earthquakes, stretching and shifting of the earth, and the ultimate breakup of supercontinents. Look closely, and you will see Pikes Peak granite, the pink crumbly igneous rock composed of quartz, feldspar and mica that is more than a billion years old. The reddish-brown sandstone is part of the Sawatch Formation, deposited more than 500 million years ago. And the grayish Manitou limestone holds clues to the past in fossils of marine animals from long ago.
The Pikes Peak Batholith
A batholith is a large mass of rock formed from cooled magma far below the Earth’s crust. Pikes Peak is a batholith that is approximately 1.04 billion years old. It is not a volcano; the molten rock that formed it was located more than 3 miles (5km) below the surface of the Earth.
Tiny creatures from a past, vast inland sea
Fossils can be found in the Manitou Limestone of this area. Limestone is mostly calcite, which came from the shell remains of marine organisms.
TRILOBITES: Rarely found, these three-segmented, hard-shelled marine animals once dominated the seas. They are among the earliest known groups of invertebrate animals called arthropods. Today, there are more species of arthropods than all other groups including insects, spiders and shellfish.
CRINOIDS: Often called sea lilies, they were attached to the sea floor by a stalk. They are passive feeders, filtering plankton and other organic sea material with their arms. Hundreds of species still live in the oceans today.
BRACHIOPODS: Marine animals that looked like clams whose shells enclosed their organs, they lived on the sea floor. Today, they are found in very cold water around the world.
Pikes Peak granite – more than just a pretty rock
The igneous rock of the Pikes Peak Batholith contains many types of beautiful minerals in its caverns.
AMAZONITE is a member of the feldspar mineral group. The variety found on Pikes Peak is prized for its blue, jade-like color. It is often found in combination with smoky quartz crystals.
TOPAZ is a rare silicate mineral that usually forms in fractures and cavities of igneous rocks, like Pikes Peak granite. Nearly as hard as diamond, Topaz is a popular gemstone used in making jewelry.