Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a combination of field mapping and measurement of column dimensions, sample petrology and measurements of plagioclase crystal size distributions (CSDs) interpreted using theoretical models of cooling. Four different lava flow units were measured, and column ordering was assessed using the hexagonality index and relative standard deviations of column side length, top area and internal angle. Upper and lower colonnades consist of dominantly 5-, 6- and 7-sided columns, with a hexagonality index value very similar to that of Giant's Causeway and other basaltic columnar jointed localities. CSDs from samples at different heights within one colonnade w...
We present detailed field observations of cooling fractures in a small-volume trachyandesitic lava, ...
We analyse two representative rubbly pāhoehoe lavas (F3 and F5) from drill cores at Tural-Rajwadi, s...
Columnar jointing is frequently observed in lava flows, as in the Giant Causeway (Ireland). The most...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Columnar jointing is a common feature of solidified lavas, sills and dikes, but the factors controll...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Basalt columns from Hrepphólar (Iceland) show distinct internal structures produced by alternating b...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
The focus of this study is cooling fractures in lavas that are associated with environments containi...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
We present detailed field observations of cooling fractures in a small-volume trachyandesitic lava, ...
We analyse two representative rubbly pāhoehoe lavas (F3 and F5) from drill cores at Tural-Rajwadi, s...
Columnar jointing is frequently observed in lava flows, as in the Giant Causeway (Ireland). The most...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Columnar jointing is a common feature of solidified lavas, sills and dikes, but the factors controll...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Basalt columns from Hrepphólar (Iceland) show distinct internal structures produced by alternating b...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
The focus of this study is cooling fractures in lavas that are associated with environments containi...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
We present detailed field observations of cooling fractures in a small-volume trachyandesitic lava, ...
We analyse two representative rubbly pāhoehoe lavas (F3 and F5) from drill cores at Tural-Rajwadi, s...
Columnar jointing is frequently observed in lava flows, as in the Giant Causeway (Ireland). The most...