Lewis Andrews/ Landscapes
- Tamar Khelashvili
- Aug 14
- 1 min read
Granitic Playground visually documents the rock features upon St Agnes, Isles of Scilly, UK. Below, much of the southwest peninsula of England lies a Granite intrusion known as the Cornubian batholith. Estimated to be a few kilometres deep, the batholith was a magnetic event of significant proportion, which coincided with the mountain-building event known as the Variscan Orogeny. During this event, collisions between ancient continents led to an uplift and formed the Variscan Mountains, which stretch from the Isles of Scilly to the Iberian Mountains in Spain. The Coarse-grained granite on the Isles of Scilly is known as Scillonian Granite and can be seen in outcrops across the landscape. The rocks seen today across the landscape originated deep below the Earth and, over millions of years, made their way across and up to the surface, where it has been subjected to erosion via wind, the sea and temperature changes. The remains of millions of years of erosion and tectonic movements can be seen on St Agnes. Strange rock formations of all shapes and sizes, caused by erosion eating away at weaker parts of the rocks, create a landscape which could be compared to a natural playground of the elements.





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