Missouri Buttes
Missouri Buttes or Little Missouri Buttes are located in Crook County in northeast Wyoming on the northwest flank of the Black Hills Uplift. The buttes are northwest of Devils Tower between the Little Missouri and the Belle Fourche rivers.
The Missouri Buttes consist of four separate summits which arise from an eroded mesa platform, the Butte Divide, which has an elevation of. The butte peaks form a rough rectangle 0.5 x 0.65 mi. in size. The northwest butte is the highest with a summit at. The northeast butte has an elevation of, the southwest butte has an elevation of and the southeast butte has an elevation of. A small lake, the Missouri Buttes Lake, lies west of the buttes.
Geology
As with Devils Tower, the buttes are composed of igneous intrusive phonolite which exhibits columnar jointing. The rocks of the buttes have been interpreted to be part of a laccolith, a magmatic stock or volcano conduits that became exposed at the surface after overlying rocks were eroded..The primary rock type at the Missouri Buttes is phonolite. This specific volcanic rock is characterized by a fine-grained gray or greenish-gray matrix containing large crystals, or phenocrysts, of feldspar and nepheline. Geologists classify the Missouri Buttes as a series of laccoliths or volcanic plugs. Because the four peaks are so closely grouped, it is believed they originated from a single large intrusive body that was later segmented by erosion. Unlike many volcanic features, the Missouri Buttes were never active volcanoes that erupted ash or lava onto the surface; instead, they cooled entirely underground as shallow intrusions.
The Missouri Buttes are located on private land with no public access.