The
sedimentary rocks were subjected to erosional processes during the Cenozoic.
The generally humid climate of southern Indiana contributed greatly to
these processes. Shales and sandstones are more impervious to erosion,
so the areas where they outcrop tended to form uplands with deeply- incised
drainage valleys. Where limestones were exposed, much of it was dissolved
and removed. Rivers became deeply entrenched, creating enough hydostratic
head to encourage karst formation in these areas. At the boundaries between
the stratigraphic layers, east- facing bluffs or escarpments formed
(see map). The Chester Escarpment continues to retreat westward, leaving
behind outliers -- sandstone- capped remnants of the original uplands.
All of these physiographic units extend well into present- day Kentucky.
A significant karst area also developed in the Devonian/ Silurian limestones of north- central and eastern Indiana, controlled by deeply- incised Teays River and its major tributaries. The Teays drained the western Appalachians, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois before joining the Mississippi via the Illinois River. Present- day remnants of this karst topography may be seen in portions of the Muscatatuck Regional Slope; however, they lack the development of the central karst due to the few deeply- incised master streams in this region.