Tag Archive for: geology

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All it takes is a flash. Lightning strikes the ground, creating temperatures of more than 3,000 degrees. The sand around the lightning strike fuses together, and fulgurite is formed. What are fulgurites? The word – based on the Latin world for thunderbolt – refers to a hollow glass tube formed when lightning strikes soil, silica, sand or even rock. These amazing structures – sometimes referred to as “petrified lightning” or “lightning stones” – don’t look like the transparent glass in your windows or kitchen cabinets. Instead they are complex structures that resemble a cross between a vegetable root and some of the more crystalline minerals such as mica. They vary in shape and size – most are only a few inches long – and they tend to form around the path of the dispersing electric charge of the lightning.

Straight Cliffs Formation, Garfield County, Utah
Photographer: Jim Kirkland

Hoodoos in the Calico sandstone of the Cretaceous-age Straight Cliffs Formation, Garfield County, Utah

Canyonlands National Park, San Juan County, Utah
Photographer: Chris DuRoss

“Zeus,” a 250-foot sandstone pinnacle, Canyonlands
National Park, San Juan County, Utah.

Bryce Canyon National Park, Garfield County, Utah
Photographer: Tyler Knudsen

Water plunges over a dolomite ledge within the otherwise easily erodible limestone of the Eocene-age Claron Formation in Water Canyon. A canal (the “Tropic Ditch”) diverts water from the East Fork of the Sevier River seven miles across the Paunsaugunt Plateau divide to the head of Water Canyon, creating a steady flow during the summer and fall that is vital to the nearby towns of Tropic and Cannonville.

Emery County, Utah
Photographer: Taylor Boden

Mine adits in uranium-bearing sandstone ledge, Emery County, Utah.

Paradox Basin, San Juan County, Utah
Photographer: Michael Vanden Berg

Crude-oil pump jack, Paradox Basin, San Juan County, Utah.

Juab County, Utah
Photographer: Ken Krahulec

Ore chutes, Eagle & Blue Bell silver-lead-gold mine, Juab County, Utah.

St. George basin, Washington County, Utah
Photographer: Robert F. Biek

Ruins of the Harrisburg town site, established by Mormon pioneers in 1861, consist of blocks of Early Jurassic-age Springdale Sandstone, which a mile to the north is the main ore-bearing horizon of the Silver Reef mining district. The mining district is famous among geologists for its uncommon occurrence of silver ore in sandstone. In the distance, the Pine Valley Mountains tower 7,000 feet above the surrounding red-rock country.

Little Cottonwood Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah
Photographer: Taylor Boden

Igneous (gray) and metasedimentary (brown) rocks in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah.

Mineral Basin, Utah County, Utah
Photographer: Grant Willis

Tilted Paleozoic strata in the “Bookends” area  of Mineral Basin, Utah County, Utah.