Tunnel Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Yellow Tunnel)

After: Downtown Above & Below Map – Office & Tunnels (https://www.downtownhouston.org/maps/?1)

I’ve worked in the oil & gas industry in Downtown Houston for over 15 years.  Like many others, every day I walk through tunnels on and surrounded by lovely rocks, minerals, and fossils without a second thought.  Though we may not have mountains in this part of the state, we have a stunning skyline and a tunnel system few people know about, and I will take these beauties for granted no more!  After the most recent Texas Parks and Wildlife Becoming an Outdoors Woman workshop that my friend and I teach geology for twice a year, the idea of creating a downtown walking tour sparked.  We enlisted a fellow geoscientist also located in Downtown Houston to join us in our quest.  We found a few scattered tours and information online (referenced below), an e-book on Amazon (link below), and little else.  So Katy, Christen, and I have set out twice a week to scout all of Downtown Houston on favorable days (preferably double digit temperatures) and tunnels during the summer months (or rainy days).

We’ve taken hundreds of pictures and have tried to find as many facts and best guesses as possible.  If you do one of our self-guided tours on your own and find more accurate information, we’d be happy to update it here.  We proudly bring to you the second of several self-guided walking tours: Yellow Tunnel, which is almost exactly the same rocks featured in Skyline Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Hyatt Loop), so much of the information is repeated so you don’t have to go back and forth between tours/posts.  There’s a condensed free PDF guide at the bottom of this post for easy printing or smart phone viewing.  And if you need a super quick geology precursor, you can find that here: Geology Basics: For the Casual Observer or Amateur Enthusiast.  Enjoy, fellow rock lovers!

1111 LOUISIANA

Flooring (Transitions)

Fossiliferous Limestone

Flooring (Main)/Baseboards/Wall Accents

Diabase/ Gabbro (dark grey-black mafic intrusive igneous)

Flooring (Transitions)

At the entrance and exit of this tunnel are new tiles of clayey or dolomitic limestone with small unidentified fossil fragments throughout

Wall Accents

Polished diabase/gabbro containing small grained but just visible to naked eye dark minerals

Flooring (Main)

The center/main area of this walkway (in the tunnel we downtowners call the “Moon Room”) between the fossiliferous limestone transition tiles is alternating polished and unpolished and sealed diabase/gabbro containing small grained but just visible to naked eye dark minerals

TOTAL PLAZA – 1201 LOUISIANA

Wall Accent

Granite (grey felsic-intermediate intrusive igneous)

Color matched: Coldspring Iridian (trade) from Minnesota

PreCambrian (1.8-1.75 gy)

Observed: uniform medium grained granite containing smoky quartz, plagioclase feldspar, hornblende, pyroxene

HYATT REGENCY – 1200 LOUISIANA

Tunnel

No geologic stones present, keep walking…

CLAY GARAGE – 777 CLAY

Flooring

Granite (grey felsic-intermediate intrusive igneous)

Color matched: Coldspring Iridian (trade) from Minnesota

PreCambrian (1.8-1.75 gy)

Observed: uniform medium grained granite containing smoky quartz, plagioclase feldspar, hornblende, pyroxene, unpolished but thickly sealed

WEDGE INTERNATIONAL – 1415 LOUISIANA

Tunnel View of Patio

Granite (dark pink, felsic-intermediate intrusive igneous)

Probably from South Dakota (very similar to Houston Public Library)

Pegmatite veins dominant

Tunnel View of Lobby

Marble (white with grey veins, metamorphic)

Pegmatite veins: holocrystalline (roughly), intrusive igneous rock composed of interlocking phaneritic crystals (usually larger than 1”)

Observed: potassium feldspar rich veins and dark mineral veins, contains both pyroxene and hornblende, uniformly parallel veins throughout

Marble veins: due to various mineral impurities such as clay, silt, sand

Download Free PDF Tunnel Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Yellow Loop) here: DowntownGeologyYellowPDF

Published Walking Tours

Skyline Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (City Hall Loop)

Tunnel Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Red Loop)

Skyline Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Hyatt Loop)

Tunnel Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Yellow Tunnel)

Skyline Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Jones Loop)

Tunnel Geology: A Self-Guided Walking Tour of Downtown Houston’s Buildings (Teal Tunnel)

CONTRIBUTORS

Sheila Echols-Smesny holds a Bachelor of Science in Geology from Sam Houston State University, an Executive MBA from Texas Woman’s University, and works at an oil & gas company in Houston.  Red Shoes. Red Wine. is Sheila’s travel, lifestyle, & hobby blog.

Christen Peevy holds a Bachelor of Science in Geology from University of Oregon and works at an oil & gas company in Houston.  Christen’s lifestyle blog is Short Sweet & Lovely.

Katy Mainwaring holds a Bachelor of Science in Geology from Texas Tech University and works at an oil & gas company in Houston.  Katy teaches geology with Sheila for Texas Parks and Wildlife Becoming an Outdoors Woman program.

BEFORE YOU GO

Safety

  • Look up, not at your phone, when navigating downtown
  • Please be mindful of the traffic lights, pedestrian signals, bike lanes, and buses
  • Buses make frequent stops and can sometimes hop curbs
  • Some curbs, pavements, and streets may be uneven

Etiquette

  • Please review the walking guide prior to arriving downtown to maximize time spent on the tour
  • Please be mindful of downtown employees and keep slower pedestrian traffic to the right so they can go about their business
  • Try to walk in pairs if walking around downtown as a group
  • If approached by a homeless person, try to be firm but respectful

REFERENCES

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