Florida Geology: Uniquely Beautiful

Coquina rocks during sunrise

Florida’s highest point is the lowest of any state, but the peninsula’s remarkable geological history is anything but flat. Check out this profile of state parks that protect rockin’ geological features.

Have you ever wondered why Florida has so many lakes, springs and sinkholes? Much of Florida is “karst” terrain, a landscape resting on a water-soluble rock layer full of holes, caves and underground rivers. Rocks, sediments, landforms and water across the state tell a fascinating story.

boardwalk, sinkhole, water, boardwalk, cave
Falling Waters State Park

Springs are karst features formed when limestone dissolves.

As their cool water flows to the earth’s surface, springs offer a window into the Floridan aquifer, which provides more than 90% of our drinking water. Perhaps the most famous spring is at Edward Ball Wakulla Springs State Park, but there are many spring parks, each with their own unique geology.

Sinkholes are another type of karst feature created when underground rock dissolves and collapses.

Some of Florida’s most stunning sinkholes are protected by state parks. Falling Waters State Park features Florida’s tallest waterfall at over 70 feet. At Devil's Millhopper Geological State Park, a lush subtropical forest has grown within a 120-foot-deep sinkhole. Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park, a vast wetland prairie, has karst terrain on its northern edge and a sinkhole that acts like a "drain" when water levels are high.

Pollutants from the surface can seep into the aquifer and impact water quality in sinkholes, springs and drinking water supplies.

One of Florida’s lesser-known geological features seem out of place in the flat state. Visiting a steephead ravine gives the impression that you’re in a mountainous area.

These ravines form when spring water seeps from the ground, carving a deep channel. At Ravine Gardens State Park, a paved loop road and unpaved trail network provide awesome views of clear spring streams and two ravines over 100 feet deep.

On the trails at Mike Roess Gold Head Branch State Park and Torreya State Park, you can explore deep ravines that shelter unique habitats from the outside world.

Fossils at Windley Key
Windley Key Fossil Reef Geological State Park

Some parks located near the coast offer examples of Florida’s geological and human history.

At Anastasia State Park Spanish settlers quarried coquina, a stone made of naturally cemented fossil shell fragments, and used it to construct the massive Castillo de San Marcos.

At Windley Key Fossil Reef Geological State Park you can stand inside a fossilized coral reef, a segment of Florida’s Coral Reef frozen in time.

Learn more about the Florida Geological Survey’s designated State Geological Sites or geology in Florida State Parks