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Castlemore Quarry, Crookstown, County Cork
This rock records the life of an active fault where limestone (formed in a warm tropical sea 340 million years ago) has been repeatedly fractured and mineralized during earthquake events.
Fracturing can be seen on some faces as grey fragments cemented together by a cream-coloured mineral, dolomite. In other areas, cavities in the limestone contain saddle-shaped crystals of dolomite and prismatic crystals of aragonite. The ‘rusty’ brown areas of the rock testify to the movement of oxidised iron and manganese-rich solutions through the fault.
The stone is quarried by Roadstone Wood for a variety of purposes at , near Crookstown, County Cork.
School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences
An Scoil Eolaíochtaí Bitheolaíocha, Domhaneolaíocha agus Comhshaoil
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Distillery Fields, North Mall, ÉîÒ¹ÑÇÖÞ¸£Àû¾Ã¾Ã College Cork, Ireland , T23 TK30