Geology
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 Southwestern South Dakota
Sculptures
Mount Rushmore (National memorial)
Crazy Horse
Geologic and natural history
Badlands (National park)
The Mammoth Site
Needles
Spearfish Canyon
Mountains
Black Hills
Bear Butte (National Historic Landmark)
Black Elk Peak
Caves
Wind Cave (National park)
Jewel Cave (National monument)
Forests and wildernesses
Custer (State Park)
Black Hills (National Forest)
Black Elk (Wilderness)
Buffalo Gap (National Grassland)
Lakes
Sylvan
Pactola
Long-distance trails
Centennial Trail
George S. Mickelson Trail
Scenic byways
Peter Norbeck Scenic Byway
Spearfish Canyon
Historic sites
Minuteman Missile (National Historic Site)
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Jewel Cave is a solutional cave formed primarily in limestone. Most of the cave formed within the Pahasapa Formation deposited during the Mississippian, approximately 350 million years ago. The later limestones, sandstones, and shales deposited in these Paleozoic and Mesozoic seas, known collectively as the Minnelusa Formation, were eroded with the geologic uplift associated with Laramide Orogeny and the formation of the Black Hills. The main passages of the cave then formed in the early Cenozoic. Uplift continued in the Late Pliocene or Early Pleistocene, lowering the water table and draining the cave.: 29–30 
Jewel Cave passages follow a pattern of joint development. The faults and joints are associated with the uplift of the Black Hills approximately 58 to 54 million years ago. After main cave dissolution, a thick layer of calcite lined the walls about 2.5 million years ago.: 12 
During cave development and afterwards, speleothems and speleogens formed, including the "jewels" or spar. Other examples include stalactites, stalagmites, soda straws, flowstone, cave popcorn, boxwork, helictites, scintillites, conulites, logomites, cave pearls, rimstone, rafts, rims, vents, and frostwork. The gypsum formations include needles, beards, cotton, hair, flowers, and spiders. Finally, Jewel Cave contains a very rare formation called a hydromagnesite balloon. Those are created when gas of an unknown source inflates a pasty substance formed by the precipitation of the magnesium carbonate hydroxide mineral.: 14–18 
Hydromagnesite balloon in Jewel Cave
Jewel Cave is a breathing cave, which means air enters or exits the cave with changes in atmospheric pressure from day to night or due to changes in the weather. This was first explained by Herb Conn in 1966. The temperature inside the cave is 49 °F (9 °C) year-round.
Although much of Jewel Cave is dry, over a dozen underground lakes have been discovered where the cave meets the Madison Aquifer, about 600 feet (180 m) below the surface. The first of these, Hourglass Lake, was discovered in 2015.
Jewel Cave is located less than 20 miles (32 km) from Wind Cave National Park, though the caves are not believed to be connected.