Granite tors evidence of ice-free Alaska

July 9, 2020

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468

Photo by Ned Rozell. A mushroom-shaped granite tor sits on a mountainous ridge about 60 miles northeast of Fairbanks.
Photo by Ned Rozell. A mushroom-shaped granite tor sits on a mountainous ridge about 60 miles northeast of Fairbanks.


As I started hiking a ridgetop during the July Fourth weekend, a friend told me to look for the mushroom rock ahead.

At first, I thought I may have heard her wrong.

But a few hours later I saw the rock she was talking about. It appeared to be a granite tor, but looked more like a mushroom than the gray fingers and fists we Alaskans recognize.

What is a granite tor? We have those blocky towers of rock here in Interior Alaska, and in other places that escaped being run over by glaciers.

Because Alaska is such a cold place, and is home to thousands of glaciers, it’s hard to believe that its cold heart was once a grassland, when Manhattan and Chicago were smothered beneath blue ice.

Twenty-thousand years ago, at the height of the last ice age, Alaska was connected to Siberia in a wide, grassy plain, the home of horses and bison. The Bering Land Bridge was free of ice, as was middle Alaska, from Nome eastward to Eagle and beyond to the Yukon Territory.

 Photo by Ned Rozell. John Shook skis toward granite tors located near Serpentine Hot Springs on the Seward Peninsula.
Photo by Ned Rozell. John Shook skis toward granite tors located near Serpentine Hot Springs on the Seward Peninsula.


All of Alaska was not ice-free, though. During the most recent ice age, the Alaska Range and all the land south of it was beneath an ice sheet. To the north, the Brooks Range was also solid ice, as was an area of Southwest Alaska where quirky glaciers still exist in the Ahklun Mountains.

If glaciers had pressed down in Interior Alaska, they would have sheared off the rock protrusions we know as tors. Where you find tors, you can imagine a Pleistocene pathway for plants and animals.

Tors exist in areas where there is granite, a coarse-grained, hard rock. After many, many years of wind and water eroding softer materials away, the granite tors have endured.

“Most of the Interior’s big tors predate the Last Glacial Maximum (about 20,000 years ago) and are the product of literally millions of years of weathering in ice-free terrain,” said Dan Mann, a University of Alaska Fairbanks expert on ancient landscapes.

In Alaska, water enters the cracks in tors and, when it freezes, shoves the rocks apart. Over thousands of years, tors shed their own rocky terraces. These plateaus, often covered with low vegetation, are nearly flat, and can be pleasant places to walk.

The tors started as blobs of molten rock deep within the earth. The magma rose through denser rock, hardened into granite and eventually met the air as the ground surface weathered away.

Photo by Jay Cable. Granite tors decorate a ridge near Mount Prindle in Interior Alaska.
Photo by Jay Cable. Granite tors decorate a ridge near Mount Prindle in Interior Alaska.


Granite tors are scattered on hilltops all over middle Alaska, from near Serpentine Hot Springs on the Seward Peninsula to the Chena River State Recreation Area outside Fairbanks, which features a Granite Tors Trail.

As for the mushroom-shaped tors, Mike Whalen of the Geophysical Institute said he suspects the granite there formed with some sort of layering process, and the rocky stem of the tor was softer than its cap.

“It probably could have formed from wind sand-blasting the thing,” he said.

If so, that mushroom is a yardang. A yardang is a landform created by wind, often where water is scarce and the wind usually blows from the same direction.

Since the late 1970s, the University of Alaska Fairbanks' Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Roze is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.