Rock Garden
As I mentioned yesterday, the Virginia Department of Geology and Mineral Resources has an excellent rock garden outside their office in Charlottesville, displaying a diverse suite of large rock samples from across the state's five physiographic provinces.
Here's Rick Diecchio (George Mason University) providing a sense of scale for the rock garden:

Here's a few of the samples that caught my eye, with my shoe providing a sense of scale (size 12, specifically) in each image...
Aquia Formation sandstone with Turitella fossils (Paleocene); King George County:

Balls Bluff Siltstone with mudcracks (Triassic); Culpeper County:

Conococheague Formation collapse breccia (Cambrian); Augusta County:

Cranberry Gneiss (?) showing well-developed lineation (Mesoproterozoic); Grayson County:

Kyanite quartzite (probably Ordovician metamorphic age); Prince Edward County:

Fossil Sigillaria tree trunk from the Wise Formation (Pennsylvanian); Wise County:

Unakite, the state rock of Virginia according to some (Mesoproterozoic); Rockbridge County:

Here's a link to the PDF (1.82 MB) with all the details about all the rocks in the garden, an impressive achievement just like the symposium.
Here's Rick Diecchio (George Mason University) providing a sense of scale for the rock garden:

Here's a few of the samples that caught my eye, with my shoe providing a sense of scale (size 12, specifically) in each image...
Aquia Formation sandstone with Turitella fossils (Paleocene); King George County:

Balls Bluff Siltstone with mudcracks (Triassic); Culpeper County:

Conococheague Formation collapse breccia (Cambrian); Augusta County:

Cranberry Gneiss (?) showing well-developed lineation (Mesoproterozoic); Grayson County:

Kyanite quartzite (probably Ordovician metamorphic age); Prince Edward County:

Fossil Sigillaria tree trunk from the Wise Formation (Pennsylvanian); Wise County:

Unakite, the state rock of Virginia according to some (Mesoproterozoic); Rockbridge County:

Here's a link to the PDF (1.82 MB) with all the details about all the rocks in the garden, an impressive achievement just like the symposium.
Labels: conferences, fossils, igneous, meetings, metamorphism, primary structures, sediment, virginia


1 Comments:
Nice batch of rocks. Unakite is one of my favorites - I wonder how a piece or two ended up in Alaska! ;)
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