Back to Basalt Columns!
Posted: Sunday, 06 July 2008 |
Comments
Great photos, MM, that very clearly illustrate the rocks. I like pic 2 with the sloping columns. Also, the sea stack with the split - I suppose eventually it would split off? And the pink stuff - could this be related to the pink stuff that grows on shower curtains if you're not careful? :-) i.e. a kind of mould.
Jill from EK
these photos are really great--- I wonder just how many people in scotland realise what natural beuty they have on their doorsteps.
carol from over here-
Very fine blog, MM. The pink stuff in the cave might be a soft coral but there certainly is a lot of it.
Barney from Swithiod again
Carol (from over there) Its a good point - there is quite a remarkable variety of scenery to be found in this country, but because a lot of it takes a little bit of effort and maybe ingenuity to get to, it gets passed by. The best places definitely requre a bit of work!
MM from Mull
Thanks for the pictures. They brought back many wonderful memories of the holiday my wife and spent on Mull and the Isle of Iona. William
wewullie@bellsouth.net from USA
Lovely photos, MM. The cave with the pink stuff is surely the mouth of a sea monster (the mester muckle Stoorworm, perhaps?)
Stromness from Hearing folktales
My earlier comment has gone AWOL. I love these pics MM, especially the second one with the curved columns. Your photos should be in textbooks, they illustrate so clearly the features you describe! Pink stuff: could this be a kind of fungus/mould? It reminded me of the pink stuff you can get on a shower curtain if you aren't careful... :-)
Jill from EK
The basalt columns remind me of the Giant's Causeway in NI. I thought that was the only place where these rocks were to be found. You learn something new every day.
Carol from IBHQ
Carol from IBHQ: Most of the rocks of Mull are of Tertiary age, same as those of Northern Ireland. So they are very closely related. There are several places that are all part of this "Tertiary Igneous Province": Skye, Rum, St Kilda, Ardnamurchan, Arran, Northern Ireland and even Lundy Island. The whole area must have been phenomenally active 60 million years ago. Its all related to the opening up of the Atlantic Ocean, as the plates moved apart. If you look at a tectonic map of the world, you will see an obvious line right up the middle of the Atlantic, where this spreading process is still taking place. Iceland sits right astride this line. Personally I find this sort of stuff fascinating. But I'm a geek :-)))))
MM from Mull
Of course you aren't a geek, MM! You're just interested in the things around you. I bet you're a great teacher, too!
Jill from EK
Rainbow? Geoffrey, Bungle and Zippy were rock stars? Well...I always thought so...
Flying Cat from somewhere over the...
Hi MM - great pics - I love the basalt columns - just find them so fascinating - the pink cave looks identical to the one on Staffa - just lovely and pink! Off to Speyside for a few days and Cairngorms - see what we can see!
Wild Freckle from loving the basalt columns
Wild Freckle Might just bump into you - you never know. We are in Inverness for the week but will be having frequent forays to CG area. Already been hunting for mica in remote arcane locations.......
MM from Inverness (on hols....)