Title: Columnar
1Columnar Joints
Giants Causeway, Ireland
http//www.ivanweb.net/images/Mondo/Irlanda/Giants
20Causeway,06.jpg
2Giants Causeway, Ireland
http//www.gaschurman.com/world/europe/northern20
ireland/giant20causeway/slides/giant20causeway2
013.jpg
3Mud cracks illustrate, in 2-d, the process of
volume contraction. As the mud dries, its clay
minerals contract, eventually pulling away from
one another when the contraction stress exceeds
the mud strength.
4In a lava flow, extend the mud crack process into
the third dimension, and you have columnar joints
5In a side view, you dont see the polygonal
pattern as well, but you do see the columnar
nature of the columns
1m
6Here, on the S. flank of E. Maui volcano, the
tops of the columns are exposed in a gully. The
surface is not horizontal because the flow
itself was emplaced on a slope the columns are
almost always perpendicular to the cooling
surface.
7Kepuni Gulch, East Maui
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10Onomea, Hawaii
11Here are the tops of some 2 million year-old
columns above Makapuu, Oahu. Notice that
weathering has preferentially attacked the
fractures - eventually these will become
individual boulders.
12The next geologic event was cutting of the gully.
13Dikes also show columnar jointing, but because
dikes are essentially vertical (and therefore
have vertical cooling surfaces), their columnar
joints are horizontal. It is these pre-broken
fragments of dense dike rock that were often
made into adzes by Polynesians.
14A dike cutting diagonally across lava flows on
Kauai
15Devils tower (Wyoming), a remnant of a thick
lava flow or dome, is probably the most famous
example of columnar jointed rock in the USA.
Photos by Steve Mattox, from
http//volcano.und.edu/vwdocs/volc_images/north_a
merica/devils_tower.html