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The forum discussion centers on the geological features and formations of columnar basalt, particularly highlighting the Giant's Causeway in Ireland and the Devils Postpile in California. The discussion explains the formation process of columnar basalt, which occurs when hot rock cools and contracts, creating tensile stress that leads to cracking and the formation of hexagonal prisms. Additionally, the K-Pg boundary is discussed, emphasizing its significance due to high iridium concentrations linked to the Chicxulub impact event. Various geological sites and formations, including the Pine Creek Mine and Mono Lake, are also mentioned, showcasing the diversity of geological phenomena.
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A friend had this cartoon on a gag-a-day calendar or something like that:Mark44 said:The K-Pg boundary is noted for its high concentration of iridium, much higher than normally found on Earth, but present in higher concentrations on asteroids and such. One hypothesized cause for the much higher-than-normal concentrations of iridium throughout the world in the K-Pg layer is the asteroid that created the Chicxulub impact crater on and near the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico about 66 million years ago.
Devils Postpile, about 20 miles north of the Pine Creek Mine as the crow flies. At location of head waters of the San Joaquin River that goes down into the Central Valley of California. The Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains are really beautiful.Ibix said:Essentially what happens is that solid but still hot rock cools and shrinks, which builds up tensile stress. It can relieve the stress by cracking, and depending on the material properties you can get a lot of T or Y shaped junctions, which ends up yielding fairly regular columnar prisms, most (but not all) hexagonal.
Early horses were significantly smaller than modern horses, reaching a shoulder height of about 30 to 35 cm. They were roughly the size of a German Shepherd or a cat and weighed approximately 5 to 6.5 kg. These early horses lived in forests around 50 million years ago.difalcojr said:How little is little? Wish there was a (required) ruler underneath to give this.
About 100 acres, if I did the conversion right (40 ha).difalcojr said:Never saw oil shale before or in an open pit. Interesting looking. Doesn't look like too big a clean-up mess of it.
Yes, a former oil shale mine. And if I remember correctly, they wanted to use it as a garbage dump.difalcojr said:Was it a clean mine operation?
It is, although Wildflecken is just across the border in Bavaria, but the landscape there is typical for Hessen.difalcojr said:I was stationed in Wildflecken for 9 months. Hessen is really beautiful.