Castor River Shut-Ins
$15.00 – $300.00
Shut-ins are granite rock formations that are in several streams in the Missouri Ozarks. The Castor River Shut-ins are unique in that the granite is pink. Very photogenic. The blurred water effect is from a multi second exposure at 5 o’clock in the morning.
Click On Image To Enlarge
Description
The pink granite of the Castor River Shut-ins
Shut-ins are granite rock formations that are in several streams in the Missouri Ozarks. The Castor River Shut-ins are unique in that the granite is pink. Very photogenic. The blurred water effect is from a multi second exposure at 5 o’clock in the morning.
The Castor River Shut-Ins is Missouri’s only known pink granite shut-ins. This picturesque pinkish granite is from the Breadtray formation, an igneous rock formation that is 1.5 billion years old. Most of the exposed igneous rocks of the St. Francois Mountains region are rhyolite rather than granite. Igneous rocks are formed from volcanic activity. Granite is a coarse-grained igneous rock formed from magma that cooled underground and was later exposed. By contrast, rhyolite is formed when magma is cooled above ground. Shut-ins occur where a broader stream is “shut in” to a narrow canyon-like valley. Shut-ins typically occur in Missouri where streams flow through softer sedimentary bedrock materials such as dolomite or sandstone and then encounter the more resistant igneous rock.
The rocky slopes and outcrops above the Castor River support igneous glade natural communities. These areas have widely scattered shortleaf pine, blackjack oak and farkleberry in between which are found large areas of mosses and lichens. Where some soil has developed in cracks and fissures in the rock you can find lance-leaf coreopsis, prickly pear cactus, pine-weed, and little bluestem.
Castor River flows through the area with pools, riffles, the shut-in, and small waterfalls. Downstream of the shut-ins you might spot colorful small fishes such as the Ozark minnow, bleeding shiner, rainbow darter, and striped fantail darter. Anglers might get lucky and catch a smallmouth bass, shadow bass (goggle-eye), or longear sunfish. The stream itself can be a welcome relief on a hot summer day and makes for good wading. Downstream of the natural area is the site of the Hahn’s gristmill which operated in the 1870s.
Additional information
Sizes | 12×18, 16×24, 20×30, 24×36, 30×40, 30×45, 5×7, 8×12 |
---|
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.