Now on ScienceBlogs: Freethinker Sunday Sermonette: Ricky Gervais on The Book of Genesis

Seed Media Group

Collective Imagination

Search

Profile

41px-face.jpg Maria Brumm has a Master's degree... in Earth Science! She lives in Seattle, WA, where she works in environmental consulting.

Opinions expressed on Green Gabbro are well-reasoned and insightful. Needless to say, they are not those of my employers, Seed Media Group, or anyone on my thesis committee. Disclaimers expressed on this blog may be those of the Whad'Ya Know? quiz show.

Email: criminy.crickets [at] gmail [dot] com

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

Other Information

Let's all consume media together! Here's what I'm reading and what I'm listening to.

Subscribe to Green Gabbro

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

 Posts

LiveJournal: green_gabbro_sb

« The Union Bogeyman | Main | Repost: A Puzzle »

Friday Rock Blogging: Columnar Basalt

Category: Rock Blogging
Posted on: February 15, 2008 7:45 AM, by Maria Brumm

Waterfall and Columnar Basalt

Waterfall and Columnar Basalt © Joe Decker. Used with permission.

I finally found a piece from my nature photographer friend Joe Decker that would make a suitable subject for rock blogging. Y'see, the problem with fine art photographers is that they often forget to do things like add a rock hammer for scale. Also, they can have entire portfolio sections devoted to the Carrizo Plain without once showing an offset stream channel! It must be a very strange way to see the world.

Anyway, this image is of part of a lava flow in Iceland. As a new blanket of rock cools, it contracts. If it cools evenly and slowly enough, this contraction will create regular hexagonal columns. The phenomenon is famous at places like Devil's Postpile and the Giant's Causeway.

Share this: Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/63830

Comments

1

Yellowstone National Park is another great place to see cliffs of columnar basalt and also, in a natural dichotomy, cliffs of glassy obsidian. The juxtaposition of tall, regular, hexagonal columns and blubbly, irregular, sometimes jagged obsidian shows the full range of nature and the two extremes it can produce. Of course, given a choice between the two, I have to choose the obsidian. Anyway, that photograph above is so nice I can forgive the lack of a rock hammer or meter stick.

Posted by: Ellery | February 15, 2008 9:25 AM

2

I've been there!

Posted by: ScienceWoman | February 15, 2008 11:48 AM

3

Trivia note: pentagons, heptagons, and octagons can also be found as not-too-terribly-uncommon components of columnar basalts.

Enjoyed the photo - I visited that exact spot ten years ago.

Posted by: Emory K. | February 15, 2008 11:59 AM

4

I'm gonna have to owe you that offset stream, I've made two attempts but haven't gotten a result that conveys the offset stream idea well .. yet. :) (Both off the standard viewpoint off of Elkhorn Road.) Just sayin'. :)

Posted by: Joe Decker | February 16, 2008 11:33 AM

5

Another really good place is one I saw at a forest fire up in Oregon. All around the town of Warm Springs, on the Warm Springs Agency (an Indian Reservation) there are rather thin (10 to 20 metres) bands of columnar basalt interspersed with tufa and ejecta bands. Neat area. And there are very few plants to get in the way of the rocks!

Posted by: The (Parenthetical) Athiest | February 18, 2008 9:31 AM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Enter to win a free copy of The Monty Hall Problem
Visit the Collective Imagination blog
Advertisement
Collective Imagination

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM