Geology Field Trip to Ross of Mull
Posted: Saturday, 15 December 2007 |
Comments
Thanks MM, great photos again. Loved the stripy rocks and the Hobbit cave (was it ever lived in, I wonder?) and those lovely rounded granite boulders. What are leaf beds?
Jill from EK
Love the pictures.
Hyper-Borean from Lake Orcadie
Jill, John told us that the cave is called "Uamh nam Marbh" - the Cave of the Dead. Good name eh? Would you want to spend a night there? The window in it is really neat - must be man made - highly unlikely that , given the nature of the rest of the granite that you would get a big cavity like that. As for the Leaf Beds, these are thin sedimentary layers, silt, shale and stuff like that in amongst the lava flows - reckoned to represent periods of quiet between the volcanic activity episodes, when plants would have colonised lakes (lochs?) in the area - the leaves that are found now are the fossils that are left. Famous locality and well worth a visit
MM from Tob
Amazing pictures. You would make an incredible tour guide. Your part of the world is also fascinating geologically.. I understand NM is also quite interesting, but the guide books I can lay my hands on are rather humdrum, and I don't know of any local "Mountainman." Ignorance is not bliss, that much I know.
mjc from NM,USA
Ah, a Hobbit funeral home, perhaps. But the presence of the window would make it a des. res. to a local hunter gatherer, surely? And do you have any pics of these leaves? I know you didn't find any on this trip, but I wondered if you had any earlier ones. They sound intriguing.
Jill from EK
I havn't found leaves yet, heard of the famous fossil tree just off Burgh - is it good? But I often find ammonites ( the right expression?) just in the rubble, around here it's just a case of keeping your eyes open.
sz from bunessan
where are you hiding MM are you okay??
carol from still in nz