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Scourie | Achmelvich | Laxford | Clachtoll | Stoer | Assynt | Skiag Bridge | Glencoul | Knockan | Borralan | Ledmore |
From road-cuts near Skiag Bridge, Loch Assynt, and south of Loch Glencoul.
Quartz sandstone with vertical burrows, Cambrian Pipe
Rock
In this outcrop, part of the rock has been stained
purplish brown by iron and manganese oxide. The staining
has picked out the bedding in the sandstone (horizontal
stripes), and reveals very clearly the vertical white
sand-filled burrows that are the characteristic feature of
the Pipe Rock. The penknife is 9 cm long.
Quartz sandstone with vertical burrows, Cambrian Pipe
Rock
Here we are looking down on a bedding plane of the pipe
rock, which shows circular hollows. These are the tops of
burrows, which have weathered out because they are slightly
less strongly cemented than the rest of the rock.
Quartz sandstone with vertical burrows, Cambrian Pipe
Rock
The cut surface of this hand specimen of Pipe Rock shows
sections of the vertical "pipes", which stand out in white
against the purple-stained matrix of the sandstone. The
bedding runs horizontally across the specimen. The pipes
look a little crumpled, perhaps because the sand was
compacted before it became fully hardened into rock.
The pipes are given the scientific name Skolithos, and are thought to be made by worm-like creatures that lived upright in the burrow and fed by filtering food from shallow water above the sediment surface.
Quartz sandstone with vertical burrows,
Cambrian Pipe Rock
This view shows a section across the edge of a "pipe". On
the left, the "pipe" consists of slightly finer sand
particles with less dark material in the matrix. On the
right, the sandstone matrix contains more abundant oxide
material. This dark material is responsible for the
purple-red colour in hand specimen and outcrop.
Plane polarized light, field of view 5 mm across.
Scourie | Achmelvich | Laxford | Clachtoll | Stoer | Assynt | Skiag Bridge | Glencoul | Knockan | Borralan | Ledmore |
Home | Geological History | Stratigraphy | Area map | Rock Index | About |
D.J. Waters, Department of Earth Sciences, May 2003