kids encyclopedia robot

Image: Nova Scotia DGJ 5583 (3830611365)

Kids Encyclopedia Facts
Original image(2,886 × 4,313 pixels, file size: 7.92 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Description: The phenomenal Balancing Rock is approximately four feet wide and twenty feet tall. A wonderful quirk of nature, this immense basalt column stands alone after many like it have dropped into the sea and the earth. Roughly 200 million years ago Nova Scotia was located in the interior of the super-continent, Pangaea. Movements that began during the Triassic Period were so dramatic they eventually resulted in the break up of Pangaea into North and South America, Africa and the Atlantic Ocean. Today, when the earth's crust moves and shifts, we often witness changes of a similar magnitude caused by the devastating and destructive results of immense earthquakes and tsunamis. Deep beneath the Earth's crust (the lithosphere: a solid array of plates) is a layer of heated rock known as the asthenosphere. It is heated by the radioactive decay of elements such as uranium, thorium and potassium. This heat causes the ocean floors to continually move, shifting and separating from the center in different directions. The crustal portions of oceanic plates primarily consist of basalt. As the continents shifted, lava forced to the surface cooled and formed into columnar basalt sea stacks. These columns are usually six-sided, but can feature as few as three or as many as twelve (or more) sides.
Title: Nova Scotia DGJ 5583 (3830611365)
Credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/archer10/3830611365/
Author: Dennis Jarvis from Halifax, Canada
Permission: Quote from photographer on numerous files "PLEASE, no multi invitations or self promotion in your comments, THEY WILL BE DELETED. My photos are FREE for anyone to use, just give me credit and it would be nice if you let me know, thanks - NONE OF MY PICTURES ARE HDR."
Usage Terms: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0
License: CC BY-SA 2.0
License Link: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Attribution Required?: Yes

The following 2 pages link to this image:

kids search engine