Fort Hays Limestone Member


The Fort Hays Limestone is a member of the Niobrara Formation of the Colorado Group exposed in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota and is named for the bluffs near the old Fort Hays, a well-known landmark in western Kansas.
Defining the southeast border of the High Plains, the towering stone-capped bluffs of the commons:Category:Fort [Hays Escarpment|Fort Hays Escarpment] are "perhaps the most conspicuous physiographic boundary in Kansas."
The Fort Hays Limestone was a generally practical building stone. However, it deteriorates when in contact with soil. In contrast, the Fencepost limestone is quite durable in the ground, so, the Fencepost can be seen in foundation course of buildings that are otherwise faced with Fort Hays Limestone. Particularly in commons:File:St [Josephs Church and Parochial School.JPG|Hays] and commons:Category:First [Congregational Church (Ellis, Kansas)|Ellis], where the Fort Hays and Fencepost outcrops are in close geographic proximity, the two limestones are seen in combination in buildings.