Stalactite

A stalactite (Greek stalaktos, "dripping") is a type of speleothem that hangs from the ceiling or wall of a limestone cave. It is formed from the deposit of calcium carbonate and the dripping of mineralized solutions. The corresponding formation on the floor underneath a stalactite is known as a stalagmite. Should both these formations grow together, meeting in the middle, the resultant formation is known as a column or pillar.

There are various ways (see mnemonic) to remember which formation hangs from the ceiling (stalactite) and which grows upward from the floor (stalagmite):

  • StalaCtite has a "c" for "ceiling".
  • StalaGmite has a "g" for "ground".

  • Stalactites hang "tite" to the ceiling above
  • Stalagmites you "mite" trip over if you don't watch where you're stepping

The largest stalactite known hangs in the main chamber of Pol-An-Ionain (County Clare, Ireland). It is 6.7m long.

Related topics






Google
Home   Alphabetical Listing   Quote


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.