Mill Bluff State Park
Bluffs Survive Glacial Lake Wisconsin
Large bluffs are called mesas; smaller, more abrupt bluffs
are called buttes; and other more
slender, abrupt bluffs are called pinnacles. You can see examples of all three at Mill Bluff State Park.

The rocky bluffs glow in the sunlight.
Photo by RJ and Linda Miller
Even though this park is in the driftless area [exit DNR], the area the glaciers missed, the geologic features
are partially the result of the last or Wisconsin stage, of glaciation.
During this glacial advance, the Wisconsin River was plugged near Wisconsin
Dells. The river spread out to form glacial Lake Wisconsin, covering most of what today
are Adams, Juneau, and other adjacent counties, including the Mill Bluff
area. During this time, some of the mesa and buttes stood as islands in
the glacial lake, while others were submerged. Wave action hastened erosion
of the sides of the rock forms.

The steep bluffs fascinate travelers today as they did in pioneer days.
DNR Photo
The unique flat-topped, cliff-sided rock structures are capped by layers
of somewhat more resistant sandstone; and weathering tends to break
the rock off in vertical fragments. There are remnants of the Dresbach
Group, Upper Cambrian sandstone.
The heights of the bluffs range from 80 feet to over 200 feet. The mesa
and buttes are isolated "outliers" of the continuous limestone-capped
escarpments south of the park.
Rocks and boulders of different compositions than local bedrock are
erractics. They have been found on the sides of some of the buttes and
mesas. These erractics are boulders that were imbedded in
icebergs which floated and lodged against the mesa and buttes. When
the ice melted, the boulders remained lodged on the sandy flanks of
the bluffs.
Erosion by wind and water eventually wear away the underlying soft sandstone
until the weight of the over hanging cap rock causes it to shatter and
fall. The mounds will decrease in size until all the capping is removed.
Then the mound becomes a conical hill, gradually blending into the plain.
These unique glacial features are protected in Mill Bluff State Park,
one of nine units of the Ice Age National Scientific Reserves. Because
of the uniqueness of this park and of the delicate sandstone structures
of the buttes, climbing on or defacing the bluffs is strictly prohibited.
Anyone who disobeys this rule will have to pay a fine.
Pioneer Landmarks

Wildcat Bluff
DNR Photo
The tall buttes of Mill Bluff were
landmarks for settlers traveling west through Wisconsin and are often
mentioned in their journals or diaries. Today, the beautiful scenery and
buttes arouse traveler's curiosity to stop in for a closer look.
Ice Age National Scientific Reserve
In October 1964, Congress authorized establishment of the Ice Age National
Reserve [exit DNR]. With later joint planning between the U.S. Department of the
Interior and the State of Wisconsin, Mill Bluff was officially established
in the Federal Register in May 1971, as a unit of the Ice Age National
Scientific Reserve.
For more information, ask Mill
Bluff State Park, Phone: (608) 427-6692 (off season (608) 337-4775).
Last Revised: Tuesday February 05 2008
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