Wednesday 16 July 2014

On a date -16/7/2014

No date ideas this week (or next) because I'm off to Germany for a holiday-date. I promise to post pics of rocks when I get back. In the mean time, here's a lovely image of some folds:

Folded beds, South Australia. Total Magnetic Intensity (TMI) - Reduced to the Pole (RTP) image hosted on SARIG. Elder Rock is located in the center of this image (MGA54 357130E 6367250N).

Wednesday 9 July 2014

Date Idea 9/7/2014 - Hill of Seven Colours, Purmamarca, Argentina

23°44′38″S 65°30′04″W
Sedimentary rocks can make some of the prettiest outcrops. The Hill of Seven Colours is worth a visit for looking at it, but there is also a structural side that needs investigating - are those trust faults I spy?


Friday 4 July 2014

Something random

And now for something random:

The resident teaspoon from the School of Geosciences tea room. Clearly someone read Lim et al.'s research on disappearing teaspoons and decided to take action before they were all gone.
Or maybe it's taking passive - aggressive to a whole new level.

Wednesday 2 July 2014

Date ideas 2/7/2014 - Dead Sea

The Dead Sea is actually a very very salty lake (about 9 times saltier than the ocean). It has this high concentration of salts as the Dead Sea is a closed basin and termination point for a number of water sources. Over time these rivers have dissolved minerals and transported them to the Dead Sea. The water has evaporated, concentrating the minerals in the remaining sea water. (Interesting side note: the Dead Sea is located on the Dead Sea Transform, part of the Jordan Rift Valley). Many people visit the Dead Sea for it's supposedly healthful waters - I wonder if the water could be considered the opposite of Homeopathy?

Also, hills of halite (salt)!

Anyway, it looks beautiful and would be quite nice to visit if we could avoid the tourists.


Tuesday 1 July 2014

Historic places I've been - Lake Purdiguluc, Colac, Victoria

Geophysics survey, Lake Purdigulac, 2009. -38.260268, 143.499328
Purdigulac is a nested maar complex of multipe vents and some scoria cones. It lies south of the Red Rocks complex and right in the middle of the Eastern Volcanics. It was a pain to survey as the lake occasionally fills with water and the concentration of salts creates meter deep cracks in the sediments at the bottom of the craters during dry times. Flicity (volcanologist), Tegan (volcanolo-physicist) and I (geo-physicist) quite enjoyed our time exploring this volcano.


 An image of the Red Rocks complex taken nabbed from the AltonaBeauty blog. Purdigulac is part of the Red Rocks Complex which contains at least 9 craters and a number of scoria cones. Work by Teagan Blakie and Flicity Piganis has identified that Purdigulac is one of the most complex craters in this complex with at least 9 eruptive points and shallow diatreme structures with multiple coalescing vents.