Grand Gulf State Park - Oregon County, MO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 36° 32.640 W 091° 38.704
15S E 621275 N 4045142
Grand Gulf State Park, Missouri's Little Grand Canyon
Waymark Code: WMP875
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 07/18/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member DougK
Views: 2

County of park: Oregon County
Location of park: MO W, 12 miles west of Thayer
DNR Phone: 1-800-334-6946
Grand Gulf Phone: (417) 264-7600

Markers: Missouri state parks and historic sites preserve and interpret the state's outstanding natural and cultural features while providing recreational opportunities. Grand Gulf State Park preserves one of the states's most significant geologic wonders - a major collapsed cave system, often called the "Little Grand Canyon." When a portion of the cave roof collapsed, it created a three-fourths-mile-long canyon and one of the largest natural bridges in Missouri.

THE NATURAL BRIDGE
You are standing on the natural bridge, a portion of the cave roof that did not collapse. If the ground was sliced away just right of where you are standing, this is what you could see.
[see photo in gallery]


MISSOURI'S LITTLE GRAND CANYON
Grand Gulf, often referred to as Missouri's "Little Grand Canyon," has a long history as a geologic curiosity. It is a spectacular sight and is a true chasm, deeper than it is wide.

To understand its origin, one must understand the geology of the area. The limestone and dolomite bedrock here are very soluble in the mildly acidic groundwater that percolates down from the surface. The water seeps into the fissures and fractures in the bedrock, eventually enlarging the cracks into caves.

here at Grand Gulf is a cave system with a roof collapse and estimated 10,000 years ago. The result is a vertical-walled canyon about three-quarters of a mile long. Bussell Branch, a surface creek that drains about 25 square miles, empties into the chasm through a process called stream piracy. All of this water passes down the length of the chasm, under a 250-foot natural bridge (an uncollapsed remnant of the original cave) and back into the open canyon, at the lower end of the chasm, it enters the mouth of the remaining underground cave system. It travels nine miles underground, and re-emerges at Mammoth Springs in Arkansas. Mammoth Springs flows as much as nine million gallons of water per hour, part of it from the Grand Gulf.

The steep walls of the chasm are covered with herbaceous greenery, and from the upstream end down, the canyon gets rapidly deeper. The natural bridge, which spans the canyon at about its midpoint, is some 75 feet high at the upstream end, but the ceiling drops to about 10 feet high on the downstream side. The floor of the chasm is strewn with tumbled dolomite blocks that were once part of the cave roof, now collapsed.

The mouth of the portion of the cave that has not collapsed (at the downstream end of the chasm) is blocked only a short distance inside by mud and debris that allows the water from Bussell Branch to percolate through, but bars human access. In the early 1990's a robot vehicle, equipped with a digging tool and remote camera, penetrated a significant distance into the cave. As a result of this reconnaissance, it was determined that is no feasible way through the massive blockage to gain access to the rest of the cave.

Early explorers were able to enter the cave. Luella Agnes Owen, in her book Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills (1898), recounted her explorations in the Grand Gulf. After entering the cave at the downstream end of the chasm, "The ceiling dipped so we were not able to stand straight, and the guide said he had never gone farther; but to his surprise here was a light boat which I am ready to admit he displayed n eagerness to appropriate to his own use, and swimming about it, close to shore, were numerous, small, eyeless fish, pure white and perfectly fearless; the first I have ever seen, and little beauties," she wrote. Owen used the boat to explore the underground system for a considerable distance.

Access to the deeper portions of the cave remained possible until the 1920s when a severe storm washed many downed trees and other debris into the gulf, filling the cave. Today, heavy rains fill the gulf to depths exceeding 100 feet, and the water drains out slowly over a period of several weeks.

In 1971, Grand Gulf was designated a National Natural Landmark, and in, 1984, the property became a Missouri State Park through a lease agreement between the L-A-D Foundation and the Department of Natural Resources. The department has laid out trails and boardwalks at this 322-acre day-use park, and there are many picnic site scattered on the tree-shaded rim of the chasm.
Text from Missouri Department of Natural Resources brochure

Park Type: Natural Landmark, day use

Activities:
beside just viewing the beauty, there is hiking trails, also boardwalks high over and around the canyon, picnicking, fossil hunting, bird watching MO Dept. of Conservation to view all activities and permits required.


Park Fees:
0


Background:
"Some people call Grand Gulf State Park the “Little Grand Canyon.” Some just call it “breathtaking.” The park is one of the natural wonders of the Ozarks, presenting the most spectacular collapsed cave system in the Ozarks. The "Grand Gulf" stretches for more than a mile between 130 foot high walls. Visitors can view the gulf from trails on top or from the floor where they can walk under the natural bridge, which spans 250 feet with a 75-foot high opening. There is no official trail leading to the bottom so visitors should use extreme caution when attempting to access the bottom. Interpretive trails detail the formation of the gulf." ~ DNR


Date Established?: 1984

Link to Park: [Web Link]

Additional Entrance Points: Not Listed

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