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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Geology  





2 See also  





3 References  





4 External links  














North Mountain (Nova Scotia)






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Coordinates: 45°60N 64°450W / 45.10000°N 64.75000°W / 45.10000; -64.75000
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


North Mountain
North Mountain ridge above Granville Ferry, Nova Scotia
Highest point
PeakMount Rose
Elevation235 m (771 ft)
Coordinates45°6′0″N 64°45′0″W / 45.10000°N 64.75000°W / 45.10000; -64.75000
Geography

Location of North Mountain

CountryCanada
ProvincesNova Scotia
Topo mapNTS 21A Annapolis Royal
21B Eastport
21H Amherst
Geology
Age of rockTriassic
Type of rockIgneous
Map

About OpenStreetMaps

Maps: terms of use

50km
30miles

Five Islands, Nova Scotia

Five Islands

Five Islands, Nova Scotia

Margaretsville

Margaretsville

Digby Neck

Digby Neck

Digby Neck

Digby Gut

Digby Gut

Digby Gut

Cape Split

Cape Split

Cape Split

Minas Basin

Bay of Fundy

N O R T H M O U N T A I N R I D G E

N O V A S C O T I A

Brier Island

Brier Island

Brier Island

  

Location of North Mountain Ridge on the southern shore of the Bay of Fundy

North Mountain (French: Montagne du Nord; Gaelic: Beinn a Tuath) is a narrow southwest-northeast trending volcanic ridge on the mainland portion of southwestern Nova Scotia, stretching from Brier IslandtoCape Split. It forms the northern edge of the Annapolis Valley along the shore of the Bay of Fundy. Together with South Mountain, the two ranges form the Annapolis Highlands region. [citation needed]

North Mountain rises dramatically from the valley floor and tapers somewhat more gradually to the north and west where it meets the coast, although many parts of this coast have vertical cliffs rising higher than 30 metres, most notably at Cape Split. A break occurs at Digby Gut where a gap in the mountain ridge is filled by a deep tidal channel separating the eastern end of the mountain from Digby Neck.

The highest point on the ridge is at Mount Rose in Annapolis County, north of Lawrencetown.

Geology[edit]

The ridge traces its history to the Triassic period when this part of Nova Scotia occupied the center of the supercontinent Pangaea. It is a 201 million year old sequence of tholeiitic basalts, which contains columnar jointing. The basalts also extend under the Bay of Fundy and parts of it are exposed on the shore at Five Islands, east of Parrsboro on the north side of the bay.[1] Numerous sediment-filled fissures are present near the upper surface of North Mountain. The hard ridge of basalt resisted the grinding of ice sheets that flowed over the region during past ice ages, and now forms one side of the Annapolis Valley in western part of the Nova Scotia peninsula.

North Mountain is believed to have formed during the opening of the Atlantic Ocean.[2] It is a portion of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, which is a gigantic flood basalt and intrusive complex along east coast of the United States, Europe, northwest Africa and South America with a diameter of 4,000 km.

A viscous (<175 m) North Mountain flow at McKay Head shows ~25-cm-thick distinguished layers separated by ~130 centimeter of basalt in its upper 34 meters. Upper layers (5 meters below the lava top) are extremely vesicular while lower ones are pegmatitic and include a narrow (~2 cm) rhyolite band. The layering of the flow closely resemble that of some Hawaiian lava lakes.[3]

Columnar basalt may be seen at Baxters Harbour and at Brier Island.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hot Spots and Rifts in Continental Crust Archived 2007-09-09 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2007-10-15
  • ^ North Mountain Basalt Retrieved on 2007-10-15
  • ^ Cooling history and differentiation of a thick North Mountain Basalt flow (Nova Scotia, Canada) Retrieved on 2007-10-15
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=North_Mountain_(Nova_Scotia)&oldid=1060066930"

    Categories: 
    Mountains of Nova Scotia
    Volcanism of Nova Scotia
    Landforms of Annapolis County, Nova Scotia
    Landforms of Digby County, Nova Scotia
    Landforms of Kings County, Nova Scotia
    Flood basalts
    Triassic Nova Scotia
    Triassic volcanism
    Mountains of Canada under 1000 metres
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    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Webarchive template wayback links
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
    Articles containing OSM location maps
    All articles with unsourced statements
    Articles with unsourced statements from January 2016
    Pages using the Kartographer extension
     



    This page was last edited on 13 December 2021, at 07:44 (UTC).

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