Geo Gallery 3 : Basalt -- Varieties and Forms :
Basalt is an extrusive volcanic rock with a large array of different surface forms and hence belongs to the most interesting geological formations. Often basalt forms surprisingly regular columns, mostly six - sided (hexagonal) but also with 5 or 7 and more sides, which many people take for crystals. But these columns are no crystals at all, but regular cracks or joints formed by successive cooling of the lava along colder surfaces like other rocks or air slowly penetrating the basalt from surface to depth. Some impressive examples are shown here.
If the basaltic lava enters seawater or there is a submarine volcanic eruption, there will be no columns, but instead well-rounded basalt pillows will form. By tectonic uplifting these pillow lavas may be exposed on dry land and are a regular part of ophiolitic rock sequences, with good examples on Cyprus and in the Sultanate of Oman.
Please click (!) on the thumbnails to get a larger image with some description. If you have any questions, donīt hesitate to contact me.
Larger interactive panoramic images of Panska Skala and Hirtstein by Manuel Dahmann can be found here and here.
- Panska Skala or Herrenhaus Felsen in German language in Northern Bohemia is a basalt pipe with textbook columnar basalt.
Photo Source : Miloslav Rejha, Wikimedia Commons - The excellent exposure of Panska Skala was created by historic basalt quarrying and is today a geological and touristical landmark of great importance.
- Summit of Panska Skala with slender basalt columns.
- Detail of the columnar basalt at the top of Panska Skala / Herrenhausfelsen.
- View from Panska skala / Herranhausfelsen summit.
- Weathering of basalt columns produces basalt blockfields, where vegetation can spread.
- The Feldstein near Themar in Thuringia is a basalt dyke intruded into middle triassic muschelkalk and a classical example of fan shaped columnar basalt.
- Fan shaped basalt columns at Feldstein near Themar. The left margin indicate the now quarried Muschelkalk, where the intruding basalt dyke was able to chill.
- Top view of columnar basalt showing typical (mostly) hexagonal jointing.
Giants Causeway, Northern Ireland
Photosource : Wikimedia Commons - The "Palmwedel" = palm leaf of the Hirtstein in the Saxo-nian Erzgebirge is an out-standing beautiful example of columnar basalt, which has been formed in a small basalt dome.
- View of the Hirtstein basalt palm leaf near Satzung, Saxonian Erzgebirge.
- Detail of columnar basalt branching at Hirtstein, Saxony.
- Submarine formation of basalt pillow lavas by rapid chilling at the lava seawater contact.
Photosource : Submarine Volcanoes on Wikispaces - Fresh submarine pillow lavas close to the Hawai islands.
Photosource : Wikimedia Commons - Classic exposure of basalt pillow lavas in the Northern Hajar Mountains, Semail Ophiolite, Sultanate of Oman.
Image width : 10 Meter - Text book basalt pillow lava in a large, several hundred meter long ouctrop in Northern Cyprus.
- Detail of a basalt pillow with indicated radial columnar jointing, Northern Cyprus
- Fresh road exposure of pillow lavas in Northern Cyprus with scale (1,80 meter).