Rock City | |
---|---|
Location | Minneapolis, Kansas, Ottawa, Kansas, Kansas, United States |
Coordinates | 39°5′27.20″N 97°44′7.99″W / 39.0908889°N 97.7355528°W |
Elevation | 1,276 ft (389 m)[1] |
Website | Web Site |
Designated | 1976 |
Rock City is a park located on hillsides overlooking the Solomon River in Ottawa County, Kansas. It is 3.6 miles south of Minneapolis, Kansas and just over 0.5 mile west of Kansas highway K-106 and the Minneapolis City County Airport on Ivy Road. In a patch of prairie about 500 meters (1,600 feet) long and 40 meters (130 feet) wide, Rock City contains three clusters of large spherical boulders. These three clusters contain a total of 200 spherical boulders. It has been designated as a National Natural Landmark.
The park, owned by a non-profit corporation, has a visitor center and picnic tables. A small admission fee, which is used to maintain this park, is charged.
The remarkable size and spherical shape of these rock formation was first noted by Bell.[2] Later, these boulders were either noted or described by Gould,[3] Landes,[4] Shaffer,[5] Ward,[6] and Swineford.[7] Shaffer[5] was the first person to map the distribution of these boulders at Rock City and investigate their petrography in detail.[8]