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Uploaded on:
2009-02-14 03:24:55.0
Type:
Digital Asset
File Size:
192.01 KB
Dimensions:
1000 x 756 pixels
252 views 4 downloads
P number: P002387
Old photograph number: C02712
Caption: Cameron, Loch Buie, south Mull, Argyllshire. Looking east.
Description: Cameron, Loch Buie, south Mull, Argyllshire. Looking east. The cliff on the left is a feature at the back of the raised beach. It is composed of granophyre, an acidic minor intrusion characterized by graphic intergrowth of the quartz and feldspar (seen in thin section) and part of the Mull Tertiary igneous complex. Mull is one of the series of Tertiary volcanic centres grouped along the west coast of Scotland and relates to a period of crustal extension between 55 and 61 million years ago. Similar aged lavas and intrusions in the Faeroes and East Greenland were all once part of the same Tertiary igneous province, before being separated by the opening of the Atlantic Ocean.
Date taken: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 GMT 1920
Photographer: Lunn, R.
Copyright statement: Crown
Acknowledgment: This image was digitized with grant-in-aid from SCRAN the Scottish Cultural Resources Access Network
X longitude/easting: 160500
Y latitude/northing: 724500
Coordinate reference system, ESPG code: 27700 (OSGB 1936 / British National Grid)
Orientation: Landscape
Size: 192.01 KB; 1000 x 756 pixels; 85 x 64 mm (print at 300 DPI); 265 x 200 mm (screen at 96 DPI);
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