Small, isolated deposits are exposed discontinuously across the 40 miles between this spot and Murphy. Erosion carried away softer siltstone and volcanic tuffs but left the more resistant oolite to weather above the mudflats.Wave action that varied with the seasons, the weather, and the types of sediment in the water washed the ooids back and forth in the shallows on the southwestern side of Lake Idaho, depositing them from 2 to 40 feet thick on steeper benches near the shore. Most other examples of ooid formation and deposition are found in wave-agitated sea waters or on the beds of much saltier lakes.The Shoofly Oolite is one of the largest freshwater lakebed oolites known in the world. Oolite is sedimentary limestone composed of tiny ooids, which form when calcium carbonate precipitates in concentric layers around individual grains of sand. The natural sculpture garden is a section of the Glenns Ferry Formation called the Shoofly Oolite.The sediments left behind from Lake Idaho are known as the Chalk Hills and Glenns Ferry Formation. Captured by the Snake River, the waters drained out in a massive flood that gouged Hell’s Canyon. Geologist think that 2 to 4 million years ago, water from melting glaciers caused Lake Idaho to overflow to the west.Thousands of feet of sediment were deposited on the Lake’s bottom over its 6.5 million years of existence, interrupted at times with layers of basalt and volcanic ash (tuff) from eruptions of adjacent volcanoes.Some 200 miles long and 35 miles wide, Lake Idaho drained south into Nevada. Now a valley, the Plain became a basin for Lake Idaho. As crustal extension progressed between 11 and 9 million years ago, the Owyhee Mountains and the Boise Front responded by rising to their present height along faults bordering the rift.Here, the earth’s crust was pulled apart, northeast to southwest, and was stretched thin like taffy. Evidence indicates that the Plain began as a continental rift about 12 million years ago. Extending across southwest Idaho between the Owyhee Mountains and Boise Front is the broad valley of the western Snake River Plain.While hiking and enjoying the great Idaho outdoors, sometimes it’s nice to actually understand the area to gain a better appreciation of what I’m seeing. This geologic information site is pretty cool and there is a walking trail on site also. The BLM has a “new” interpretive site south of Grand View on Mud Flat Road. Do not count on your cell phone to do anything other than its best impression of a paper weight in this countryside.Oolite? What the heck is that? It’s not a new beer or some kind of new fad diet food. You also want to be well-equipped with plenty of food, water, clothing, warm bedding, tent and maybe even an extra spare tire. The BLM says that normally, a typical passenger car will do fine along the road, just look out for inclement weather. There is paved road up to both ends of the byway. The western terminus at Jordan Valley, just over the state line in Oregon. The eastern terminus of the byway is at Grand View on the Snake River (about 80 miles southeast of Boise). There are pullouts and interpretive panels and kiosks in a couple places. Other than that, there are no amenities or services along the entire route. There is also a developed picnic area at Poison Creek, just west of Grand View. There is one developed campground about 30 miles east of Jordan Valley, Oregon, at the North Fork Recreation Site. The Owyhee Uplands Backcountry Byway is primarily a Bureau of Land Management route. The best times to travel: early summer and fall. Depending on how recent and how severe rainfall might be, the road can be impassable almost any time of year: that's howe the former name "Mud Flat Road" came to be. The route is usually impassable from late October through early May because of snow. Most of the road is gravel and about 1.5 lanes wide at best. The Owyhee Uplands Backcountry Byway is a 101-mile route through the backcountry of Owyhee County: deep river canyons, dry mountains, desert areas, small riparian zones and abandoned mining settlements.
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