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Huber, Norman King (1975) The Geologic Story of Isle Royale National Park. Bulletin 1309 (1st ed.). US Geological Survey 66 pp. doi:10.3133/b1309

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Reference TypeReport (edition)
Access RightsPublic Domain
TitleThe Geologic Story of Isle Royale National Park
ReportBulletin
AuthorsHuber, Norman KingAuthor
Year1975
Page(s)66Issue1309
PublisherUS Geological Survey
URL
Download URLhttps://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/1309/report.pdf
DOIdoi:10.3133/b1309Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID596249Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:596249:9
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Full ReferenceHuber, Norman King (1975) The Geologic Story of Isle Royale National Park. Bulletin 1309 (1st ed.). US Geological Survey 66 pp. doi:10.3133/b1309
Plain TextHuber, Norman King (1975) The Geologic Story of Isle Royale National Park. Bulletin 1309 (1st ed.). US Geological Survey 66 pp. doi:10.3133/b1309
In(1975) The geologic story of Isle Royale National Park. Bulletin 999. US Geological Survey
Abstract/NotesIsle Royale is an outstanding example of relatively undisturbed northwoods lake wilderness. But more than simple preservation of such an environment is involved in its inclusion in our National Park System. Its isolation from the mainland provides an almost untouched laboratory for research in the natural sciences, especially those studies whose very nature depends upon such isolation.

One excellent example of such research is the intensive study of the predator-prey relationship of the timber wolf and moose, long sponsored by the National Park Service and Purdue University. In probably no other place in North America are the necessary ecological conditions for such a study so admirably fulfilled as on Isle Royale. The development of a natural laboratory with such conditions is ultimately dependent upon geologic processes and events that although not unique in themselves, produced in their interplay a unique result, the island archipelago as we know it today, with its hills and valleys, swamps and bogs the ecological framework of the plant and animal world.

Even the most casual visitor can hardly fail to be struck by the fiordlike nature of many of the bays, the chains of fringing islands, the ridge-and-valley topography, and the linear nature of all these features. The distinctive topography of the archipelago is, of course, only the latest manifestation of geologic processes in operation since time immemorial. Fragments of geologic history going back over a billion years can be read from the rocks of the island, and with additional data from other parts of the Lake Superior region, we can fill in some of the story of Isle Royale. After more than a hundred years of study by man, the story is still incomplete. But then, geologic stories are seldom complete, and what we do know allows a deeper appreciation of one of our most naturally preserved parks and whets our curiosity about the missing fragments.

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MineralCitation Details
Chlorastrolite

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LocalityMineral(s)
Island Mine, Isle Royale National Park, Keweenaw County, Michigan, USA Native Copper


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