Not Many People Know About Nebraska's Lost Volcano
A volcano is probably the very last thing you would expect to find in Nebraska, but there is a volcano in our state’s history…kind of.
![](https://oiys-develop.go-vip.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Screen-Shot-2017-03-12-at-3.15.37-AM.png?w=720)
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The river has since changed course and no longer flows right next to the cliffs here - but before it changed course, the river significantly changed the landscape here and swept away our one and only "volcano."
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Google Maps
And when the Lewis and Clark expedition came through in 1804, they wrote that the land was "on fire" and too hot to touch.
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![](https://oiys-develop.go-vip.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/14754991346_446c1f0431_h.jpg?w=720)
(This picture and the one below depict the remains of the "volcano" in 1908. As these events took place in the very early days of practical photography, no known pictures of the Ionia Volcano exist.)
In 1839, French geographer J.N. Nicollet set out to prove that the hot, smoking hill was not in fact a volcano. His theory was that iron pyrite deposits in the hill were coming in contact with water, creating a chemical reaction that generated high heat.
In 1839, French geographer J.N. Nicollet set out to prove that the hot, smoking hill was not in fact a volcano. His theory was that iron pyrite deposits in the hill were coming in contact with water, creating a chemical reaction that generated high heat.
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![](https://oiys-develop.go-vip.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/14774838311_1064938860_h.jpg?w=720)
When an earthquake struck in 1877, settlers were sure that an eruption was imminent. However, massive flooding in 1878 put their fears to rest when the waters washed the "volcano" away. Unfortunately, the flooding also all but washed away the town of Ionia, after which the "volcano" was named.
![](https://oiys-develop.go-vip.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/NHM_68_1_11.jpg?w=720)
Park visitors can read all about the mysterious "volcano" and picture what it might have looked like there on the bluffs above the river.
Not all of Ionia and its “volcano” have been lost. Today, you can visit the Ionia overlook on the approximate site of the smoking hill, from which you can see Nebraska, South Dakota, and Iowa all at once.
This story is just one of the truly unusual things that have happened in Nebraska’s long history. For even more, take a look at our list of 8 bizarre things that have happened here.
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