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Michigan Post > Blog > Michigan > Large lava movement hiding in plain sight in Michigan
Michigan

Large lava movement hiding in plain sight in Michigan

By Editorial Board Published February 23, 2025 6 Min Read
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Large lava movement hiding in plain sight in Michigan

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — When folks consider volcanoes, they don’t usually consider Michigan. However volcanic exercise was the driving power behind a few of Michigan’s key sources and landmarks.

Historic volcanic exercise is the explanation why the Higher Peninsula is so wealthy in minerals. The proof is hiding in plain sight.

What we see as Isle Royale and the Keweenaw Peninsula is definitely a part of the one of many largest recognized lava flows on Earth.

A map of the completely different types of rock discovered all through the Greenstone Move. (Courtesy United States Geological Survey)

The Midcontinent Rift System is a large break throughout the continental plate of North America. It first shaped roughly 1.1 billion years in the past, with arms stretching roughly from metro Detroit up by Michigan, Lake Superior and into northern Ontario, then west over to Minnesota, then south down by components of Iowa, Missouri and Kansas.

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William Rose, professor emeritus of geological and mining engineering and sciences for Michigan Technological College, says the formation of the rift is without doubt one of the first “significant Earthwide events.”

“(It was) a little more than a billion years ago, when we had a huge, huge continent, very, very thick. And it piled up thicker and thicker over the mantle of the Earth,” Rose defined to Information 8. “The rocks underneath got hot. They got so hot that they sent out lavas that are different than any lavas we have now. It was so much heat that it split apart and formed a rift basin.”

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The rift basin is so giant that Rose says geologists don’t know its actual boundaries.

“We’re not sure exactly how far it extends, but at least it extends from Kansas up through Lake Superior and then down again, probably as far as Alabama,” Rose mentioned. “But it’s mostly covered up with much younger rocks. Only here around Lake Superior and closer to Minneapolis can you actually see the lavas.”

A cross-section of the Lake Superior basin that shows the volcanic rock that helps Isle Royale and the Keweenaw Peninsula. (Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey)A cross-section of the Lake Superior basin that reveals the volcanic rock that helps Isle Royale and the Keweenaw Peninsula. (Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey)

The lava movement brought on by the Midcontinent Rift System is called the Greenstone Move. The lava ultimately cooled into an enormous swath of basalt that strains a lot of the ground of Lake Superior and serves because the spine for Isle Royale and the mountains throughout the Keweenaw Peninsula.

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Researchers estimate the Greenstone Move contained anyplace from 1,650 to six,000 cubic kilometers of lava, wealthy in iron and magnesium.

“It is very hard to make a volume estimate because (the flow) is only exposed in certain places,” Rose defined. “There’s nonetheless no concrete proof that there’s some other lava movement on Earth that’s greater than the Greenstone Move.”

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Elements of the Keweenaw present basalt as much as 1,200 toes thick, which means the molten rock primarily sat there as an ocean of magma and took upwards of a thousand years to solidify.

A view of the Manido Waterfalls along the Presque Isle River inside Porcupine Mountains Wilderness State Park. (Getty Images)A view of the Manido Waterfalls alongside the Presque Isle River inside Porcupine Mountains Wilderness State Park. (Getty Photos)A view of some of the cliffs along the Keweenaw Peninsula created by prehistoric volcanic activity. (Courtesy Joshua G. Cohen/Michigan State University Extension)A view of a number of the cliffs alongside the Keweenaw Peninsula created by prehistoric volcanic exercise. (Courtesy Joshua G. Cohen/Michigan State College Extension) A view of some of the cliffs along the Keweenaw Peninsula created by prehistoric volcanic activity. (Courtesy Joshua G. Cohen/Michigan State University Extension)A view of a number of the cliffs alongside the Keweenaw Peninsula created by prehistoric volcanic exercise. (Courtesy Joshua G. Cohen/Michigan State College Extension)

“It was a great, big, ponded bunch of basalt that covered an enormous area,” he mentioned. “And the lavas did something that no other lava flows on Earth have done. Geologists call it differentiated: The rock changed its composition.”

Rose says in the course of the Keweenaw basalt is a center layer of pegmatoids, a kind of igneous rock with notably coarse grains that produce large crystals.

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“Geologists come from all over the world to see that, because in no other place can you see such a thick lava flow that lasted on the Earth for such a long time,” he mentioned. “We have field trips from colleges and universities all over the country that come here every year and look at these kinds of things.”

Blake Level on Isle Royale has a notable publicity of pegmatoids. Rose says they may also be discovered within the Estivant Pines Wilderness Nature Sanctuary in Keweenaw County and close to the now-defunct Cliff Mine and Delaware Mine.

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