We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Group. This work is focused on the regions around the Grand Coulee, Snake River, and Columbia Gorge, which form parts of this unusually homogeneous and very large sample of columnar basalt. We examine in detail the scaling relationship between the column width and the size of the striae and relate these quantitatively to thermal and fracture models. We found that the column radius and stria size are proportional to each other and inversely proportional to the cooling rate of the lava. Near a flow margin, our results put observational constraints on diffusive thermal models of joint formation. Deeper than a few meters into a colonnade, our measur...
Abstract This study examined the evolution of columnar-basalt structures using simple laboratory exp...
AbstractThe remarkable regularity of the rock columns outlined by the cooling related contraction jo...
Columnar jointed lava is an important facies in many geothermal reservoir systems. The permeability ...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
Columnar jointing is a common feature of solidified lavas, sills and dikes, but the factors controll...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
This study examined the evolution of columnar-basalt structures using simple laboratory experiments ...
Columnar joints are three-dimensional fracture networks that form in cooling basalt and several othe...
Abstract This study examined the evolution of columnar-basalt structures using simple laboratory exp...
AbstractThe remarkable regularity of the rock columns outlined by the cooling related contraction jo...
Columnar jointed lava is an important facies in many geothermal reservoir systems. The permeability ...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
Columnar jointing is a common feature of solidified lavas, sills and dikes, but the factors controll...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
This study examined the evolution of columnar-basalt structures using simple laboratory experiments ...
Columnar joints are three-dimensional fracture networks that form in cooling basalt and several othe...
Abstract This study examined the evolution of columnar-basalt structures using simple laboratory exp...
AbstractThe remarkable regularity of the rock columns outlined by the cooling related contraction jo...
Columnar jointed lava is an important facies in many geothermal reservoir systems. The permeability ...