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...... it doesn't explain the mechanism of its appearance, which I am eager to know...
This is a guess, but it looks as though the soft clay has been lying on a bed of pebbles.
I was walking in the fields here in Cambridgeshire the other day and picked up this interesting piece. I'm wondering if anyone can explain to me how this pattern forms? CHRIS-STONE.jpg (801.88 kB . 2431x2524 - viewed 8679 times)
unless of course its soft clay thats been laying on a bed of pebbles and not a fossilized piece of rock.
PS - I think @Bass you trump the @Colin2B gravel in clay hypothesis!
It looks like hexagons to me, straight lines, most efficient construction method I believe
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 13/10/2020 23:02:08It looks like hexagons to me, straight lines, most efficient construction method I believeYes, but it also occurs incidentally whenever items are packed together eg honeycomb.
It could be made by the same process that produce d the giants causeway, maybe even by the same giant.
Trump? Trump?How dare you use that foul word sir?
Quote from: Colin2B on 14/10/2020 09:04:18Quote from: Petrochemicals on 13/10/2020 23:02:08It looks like hexagons to me, straight lines, most efficient construction method I believeYes, but it also occurs incidentally whenever items are packed together eg honeycomb.It could be made by the same process that produce d the giants causeway, maybe even by the same giant.
Quote from: Colin2B on 14/10/2020 09:04:18Trump? Trump?How dare you use that foul word sir? There are much ruder words for a fart.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/10/2020 17:50:46Quote from: Colin2B on 14/10/2020 09:04:18Trump? Trump?How dare you use that foul word sir? There are much ruder words for a fart.A Trump might be a fart in England, but a Johnson is something you pee with in America.