Fossil Mountain (Wyoming)
Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox mountain Fossil Mountain (Template:Convert) is located in the Teton Range, within the Jedediah Smith Wilderness of Caribou-Targhee National Forest, U.S. state of Wyoming.<ref name=topo>Template:Cite map</ref>
As mapped by J. D. Love and others, the peak of Fossil Mountain consists of relatively flat-lying beds of the Mississippian Madison Limestone and underlying Devonian Darby Formation.<ref name="ReedOthers1971a">Reed, J.C. and Love, J.D., 1971, Preliminary geologic map of the Mount Bannon quadrangle, Teton County, Wyoming , Open-File Report OF-71-233, 1:24,000, one sheet. Reston, Virginia, U.S. Geological Survey.</ref><ref name="LoveOthers1992a">Love, J.D., Reed Jr, J.C. and Christiansen, A.C., 1992. Geologic map of Grand Teton National Park, Teton County, Wyoming, Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map. I-2031, 1:62,500, one sheet. Reston, Virginia, U.S. Geological Survey.</ref> Underlying the Darby Formation and exposed in shear cliffs and floors of glacially modified valleys are the Ordovician Bighorn Dolomite, Cambrian Gallatin Formation, Gros Ventre Formation and Flathead Sandstone. In all, there is about Template:Convert of lower and middle Paleozoic sedimentary strata exposed within the area of Fossil Mountain.
The study of the sedimentary strata within the Teton Range, shows that these strata consist mostly of limestones and dolomites. The Madison Limestone consists of a basal, dark-colored, fine-grained dolomitic limestones overlain by hundreds of feet of gray limestone that is classified as fossiliferous oosparite and fossiliferous pelsparite.<ref name="DixonOthers1965a">Dixon, J.R. and Reeves, C.C., 1965. Representative carbonate petrography of some lower and middle Paleozoic rocks, west flank Teton Mountains, Wyoming. Journal of Sedimentary Research, 35(3), pp.704-72.</ref> Abundant fossils of shells and corals, which are protected by federal laws, have been found in the Madison Limestone at Fossil Mountain.<ref name="Schiess2014a">Schiess, B., 2014. Fossil Mountain and Caves of Darby Canyon, reporter1, Aug 28, 2014, Standard Journal, Madison County, Wyoming, last accessed August 20, 2024.</ref> Underlying the Madison Limestone, the Darby Formation consists mostly of dolomites and limestones that commonly contain discontinuous layers of calcareous shale or sandstone.<ref name="DixonOthers1965a"/>
Fossil Mountain Ice Cave
Fossil Mountain Ice Cave is a notable solutional cave in the Madison Limestone west of Fossil Mountain. This cave is also known as Darby Ice Cave, Darby Canyon Caves, or Wind Cave. It has about Template:Convert of passage. The underground distance between entrances is about Template:Convert of travel underground Template:Convert on the surface. It is noted for the presence of layered ice and sediments deposits up to Template:Convert thick.<ref name="HighamOthers2018a">Higham, S.R., Palmer, A.N., 2018. Ice caves in the USA. In Persoiu, A., and Lauritzen, S.-E., eds., pp. 706-715. Ice Caves. Amsterdam, Netherlands, Elsevier. 730 pp. Template:ISBN</ref><ref name="HillOthers1976a">Hill, C., Sutherland, W., and Tierney, L., 1976, Caves of Wyoming. Bulletin 59. Geological Laramie, Wyoming, Geological Survey of Wyoming. 230 pp.</ref><ref name="IWIC2014a">IWIC, 2014. International Workshop on Ice Caves 17–22 August 2014, Idaho Falls, Idaho. Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve Timpanogos Cave National Monument, Idaho, U.S. National Park Service. 24 pp.</ref>
Fossil Mountain Ice Cave has a combination of hazards that have resulted in frequent rescues. The safe exploration of this cave requires the participation of cavers with previous experience with this cave; expertise in ice and rock caving; specialized and appropriate caving equipment; and detailed planning and preparation, including the prepositioning of ropes, for a visit to this cave. Also, visiting this cave has detrimental effects on the preservation of scientifically significant ice deposits found within this cave. For example, visitor-induced melting of ice deposits was noted as early as 1975.<ref name="HighamOthers2018a"/><ref name="HillOthers1976a"/><ref name="IWIC2014a"/>
The analysis of measurements of stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen recovered form samples of ice collected from Fossil Mountain Ice Cave provided a record of paleotemperatures of this part of the Teton Range for the past 175 years. They showed a continuing increase in local temperatures over the past the past 160 years. In addition, two consecutive very cold years in the early 1870s were found.<ref name="Fuller2006a">Fuller, N., 2006, A reconstruction of Late Holocene climate in the Teton area from layers of sediment contained in ice from Fossil Mountain Ice Cave, Teton County, Wyoming. Alpine Karst, 2, pp. 1–14.</ref>