[Rockhounds] glacial erratics (was Stonehenge geology resolved)

Lanny R lanny.r at roadrunner.com
Mon Feb 2 09:13:47 PST 2009


I have a doubt about the "Big Rock," this Okotoks Erratic really being  
one rock broken into two pieces. First, I don't recall ever seeing a  
large rock that I was sure had obviously broken into two pieces where  
it had settled in the middle so that the two pieces dipped inwards.  
Secondly, I can't see any match in the layers between the two pieces.  
That might be just a problem of how it is shown in the photograph, so  
that one can't really see them all that well. Thirdly, the piece on  
the right is more broken up and has a lot of  rusty layers, very  
unlike the left piece.

Any others care to express their opinion on this?

Regards,

Lanny


On Feb 2, 2009, at 8:48 AM, pmodreski at aol.com wrote:

> Neat website about that big rock, Kreigh!
>
>
> Some erratics are big. You might enjoy the size of the biggest one?
> ?
> http://culture.alberta.ca/museums/historicsiteslisting/okotokserratic/default.aspx?
> ?
> and the interesting legend of how it split in two.?
> ?
> Kreigh?
>
>
> And, alas, I'm afraid your post was a great disillusionment to me,  
> because I couple of years ago I had visited, and was very impressed  
> by, the Madison, Carroll County, New Hampshire, glacial erratic, a  
> N.H. State "Wayside Monument" and locally known as "the largest  
> known glacial erratic".? It is,
>
>
> "Madison Boulder is a huge granite rock measuring 83 feet (25 m) in  
> length, 23 feet (7.0 m) in height above the ground, and 37 feet (11  
> m) in width. It weighs upwards of 5,000 tons."
>
> Your Okotoks Erratic "Big Rock" in Alberta has?clearly got it all  
> beat,
>
> "The Okotoks Erratic weighs 16,500 tons. It measures 9 metres high,  
> 41 metres long and 18 metres wide."
>
> and?evidently holds the world record, as is stated in the very good  
> Wikipedia article about glacial erratics,
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_erratic
>
> Next time I'm in Alberta (never been there, actually), I've got to  
> see it!
>
> Cheers, Pete
>
>
>
> --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts ---
> multipart/alternative
>  text/plain (text body -- kept)
>  text/html
> ---
> -- 
> _______________________________________________
> Rockhounds at drizzle Mailing List
> Subscription Services:
> http://lists.drizzle.com/mailman/listinfo/rockhounds
> List Home Page, with a link to the List Usage Policy:
> http://www.eclecticlapidary.com/Rockhounds/index.html



More information about the Rockhounds mailing list