- Source: Rock shelter
A rock shelter (also rockhouse, crepuscular cave, bluff shelter, or abri) is a shallow cave-like opening at the base of a bluff or cliff. In contrast to solutional caves (karst), which are often many miles long or wide, rock shelters are almost always modest in size and extent.
Formation
Rock shelters form because a rock stratum such as sandstone that is resistant to erosion and weathering has formed a cliff or bluff, but a softer stratum, more subject to erosion and weathering, lies just below the resistant stratum, and thus undercuts the cliff.
In arid areas, wind erosion (Aeolian erosion) can be an important factor in rockhouse formation. In most humid areas, the most important factor in rockhouse formation is frost spalling, where the softer, more porous rock underneath is pushed off, tiny pieces at a time, by frost expansion from water frozen in the pores. Erosion from moving water is seldom a significant factor.
Many rock shelters are found under waterfalls.
Rock shelter formation types
Human habitat
Rock shelters are often important archaeologically. Because rock shelters form natural shelters from the weather, prehistoric humans often used them as living-places, and left behind debris, tools, and other artifacts. In mountainous areas the shelters can also be important for mountaineers.
Transhumant nomads, people who move with their livestock - often from lower permanent winter residences in the valleys to higher summer pastures - frequently build semi-permanent camps, often of rocks.
In western Connecticut and eastern New York, many rock shelters are known by the colloquialism "leatherman caves", as they were inhabited by the Leatherman over three decades in the late 19th century.
Unique vegetation
The Cumberland stitchwort (Minuartia cumberlandensis) is an endangered species of plant which is found only in rock shelters in Kentucky and Tennessee.
See also
Bhimbetka rock shelters – 30,000+ years old archaeological World Heritage site in Madhya Pradesh, India
Fincha Habera Rock Shelter – Middle Stone Age archeological site in southern Ethiopia
Gatecliff Rockshelter – Archaeological site in the Great Basin area of the western United States
Kinlock Shelter – Rock shelter and Native American cultural site in Alabama
Mesa Verde National Park – U.S. national park in Colorado
Overhang (architecture) – Architectural Roofing Feature
Roc-aux-Sorciers – Cave and archaeological site with prehistoric art in France
Rock shed – Road protection structure
Shelter Rock – Landmarked rock shelter in Nassau County, New York, USAPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
Simple dolmen – Early form of dolmen or megalithic tomb
Walnut Canyon National Monument – Protected area in Coconino County, Arizona
References
Further reading
Acosta et al., 2018. "Climate change and peopling of the Neotropics during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition". Boletín de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana.
External links
Media related to Rock shelters at Wikimedia Commons
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