Figure 2—Diagram of layers of rocks in Illinois. The oldest rocks are at the bottom, the youngest at the top. Names are the standard ones applied by geologists to the subdivisions of the geologic eras.

Era General Types of Rocks
Period or System and Thickness
Epoch
CENOZOIC “Recent Life”
Age of Mammals
Quaternary
0-500′
Pleistocene or Glacial Age
Recent—alluvium in river valleys
Glacial till, glacial outwash, gravel, sand, silt lake deposits of clay and silt, loess and sand dunes; covers nearly all of state except northwest corner and southern tip
Tertiary
0-500′
Pliocene Chert gravel; present in northern, southern, and western Illinois
Eocene Mostly micaceous sand with some silt and clay; present only in southern Illinois
Paleocene Mostly clay, little sand; present only in southern Illinois
MESOZOIC “Middle Life”
Age of Reptiles
Cretaceous
0-300’
Mostly sand, some thin beds of clay and, locally, gravel; present only in southern Illinois
PALEOZOIC “Ancient Life”
Age of Amphibians and Early Plants
Pennsylvanian
0-3,000′
(“Coal Measures”)
Largely shale and sandstone with beds of coal, limestone, and clay
Mississippian
0-3,500’
Black and gray shale at base; middle zone of thick limestone that grades to siltstone, chert, and shale; upper zone of interbedded sandstone, shale and limestone
Age of Fishes
Devonian
0-1,500’
Thick limestone, minor sandstones and shales; largely chert and cherty limestone in southern Illinois
Age of Invertebrates
Silurian
0-1,000’
Principally dolomite and limestone
Ordovician
500-2,000’
Largely dolomite and limestone but contains sandstone, shale, and siltstone formations
Cambrian
1,500-3,000’
Chiefly sandstones with some dolomite and shale; exposed only in small areas in north-central Illinois
ARCHEOZOIC and PROTEROZOIC
Igneous and metamorphic rocks; known in Illinois only from deep wells

The Pennsylvanian System contains many different kinds of rocks, including all of our minable coals. It also contains important deposits of limestone, shale, and clay, and at places oil and gas.

Next below the Pennsylvanian are the rocks of the Mississippian System, shown in blue on the map (M¹ and M²). The lower and middle Mississippian rocks (M¹) are largely limestone in and near the areas mapped, but in the central and eastern part of the state where they are buried under Pennsylvanian rocks they contain much siltstone and cherty limestone. The upper Mississippian rocks (M²) consist of a succession of sandstone, shale, and limestone formations.

This system of rocks takes its name from the Mississippi River because there are excellent exposures of these strata along the Mississippi Valley in western Illinois, southeastern Iowa, and eastern Missouri.

The Mississippian rocks are a source of limestone, fluorspar, zinc, and ganister, and are of greatest economic significance in southeastern Illinois where they are the most important of our oil-producing rocks.

The Devonian (D, dark gray on the map), Silurian, (S, violet), Ordovician (O, light pink), and Cambrian (C, deep pink) rocks, in the order named, are older than the Mississippian strata. In general, they include dolomite, limestone, shale, and sandstone. Except for small areas along the Mississippi and Illinois River Valleys, these older rocks are found at the surface only in the northern quarter of the state and locally in Alexander, Hardin, Jackson, Monroe, Pike, and Union Counties. They are nevertheless economically important because they yield limestone, dolomite, silica sand, oil, zinc and lead, tripoli, novaculite, and novaculite gravel.

The rocks of the Cambrian through Pennsylvanian Systems belong to the Paleozoic Era. The Paleozoic rocks overlie crystalline rocks, such as granites, that extend to unknown depths in the crust of the earth. The crystalline rocks are not exposed in Illinois but are encountered in the drilling of some deep wells and may be seen in the nearby Missouri Ozarks and in central Wisconsin.

STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY

The rock formations appear to lie flat in most of Illinois, but they are slightly inclined in most places. In some areas they are down-warped into basins and troughs (synclines), upfolded into domes and arches (anticlines), or broken by faults.