#5 Geology near my home or lab
Dec. 7th, 2014 02:59 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Honestly? I live in a sedimentary pseudo-basin, so to me the most exciting things are the building stones. Which -- don't get me wrong! There's some lovely ones! There's a garnetiferous marble used to face this one building, which has streaks of tiny garnets pressed into waves and curls and it's great. There are also My Favourite Kerbstones, full of great big semi-aligned plagioclase laths; and lots of nice labradorite granites.
Much more interesting is the coast around the Mouldering Ancestral Pile: the beach a five minute walk away (Polurrian) features an outcropping of the Lizard Boundary Fault - the join between continental and oceanic crust. And then there's the Lizard complex as a whole, wherein what-used-to-be-the-mantle is actually exposed at the surface - over a few miles of coast you can actually walk from the base of old oceanic crust up to the surface, through gabbroic cumulates and sheeted dykes and pillow basalts; you can literally stand on an exposure of the Moho-that-was, the boundary between crust and mantle, and it's really cool. SO: for these purposes, Cornwall is home much more than London is. ;)
Much more interesting is the coast around the Mouldering Ancestral Pile: the beach a five minute walk away (Polurrian) features an outcropping of the Lizard Boundary Fault - the join between continental and oceanic crust. And then there's the Lizard complex as a whole, wherein what-used-to-be-the-mantle is actually exposed at the surface - over a few miles of coast you can actually walk from the base of old oceanic crust up to the surface, through gabbroic cumulates and sheeted dykes and pillow basalts; you can literally stand on an exposure of the Moho-that-was, the boundary between crust and mantle, and it's really cool. SO: for these purposes, Cornwall is home much more than London is. ;)
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Date: 2014-12-08 03:42 am (UTC)Ha, who need the mohole when you have Cornwall!
Edited to add: actually this is sort of how I feel when back in Durham and we head up Weardale and over into Teesdale and encounter bits of the Whin Sill and the Sugar Limestone up near High Force and Cauldron Snout (for non-geologists/northerners, the Whin Sill is a volcanic intrusion underlying most of the North East - those shots of Hadrian's Wall running along a precipice are its northern edge, and sugar limestone is what you got when it cooked the local limestone in Teesdale - it's about as robust as the name sounds). My living room clock is a slice of Weardale limestone with galena 'numbers' I picked up in a souvenir shop on one of those trips. Geology as invocation of home.
Mantle Hillness
Date: 2014-12-08 07:33 am (UTC)I wonder if anyone's written a 'Geology guidebook for walkers' for the Lizard...
Re: Mantle Hillness
Date: 2014-12-08 03:23 pm (UTC)Strata Motor
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