Northern Missouri
The Loess Hills give Atchison County its distinctive bluffs
Atchison County's eastern uplands are part of the Loess Hills, a band of steep, windblown-silt bluffs along the Missouri River that shapes the landscape, soils, and rural building.
East of the Missouri River bottoms, Atchison County rises into the Loess Hills. Loess is fine silt, blown from old river flats after Ice Age meltwater left them dry. These deposits are especially deep and prominent in Atchison and Holt counties, where bluffs rise close to 200 feet above the floodplain.
That gives the county a real look: flat, open bottoms below, then sharp bluffs and dry prairie above. The same silt grows well but cuts easily under rain, so the hills keep a carved, steep-sided shape instead of a smooth one.
For a reader trying to picture Atchison County, the Loess Hills are not scenery pasted onto the edge. They are one reason this far northwest corner feels different from the rest of northern Missouri.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Atchison County. See every local note for the county on its page.