Chapitre du livre Landscapes and landforms of France.
The "Pink Granite" coast, in northen Brittany, some 30 km long, is more familiar to tourists than to geomorphologists. The following paper highlights the limitations of the explanations propounded to the 700 000 visitors who annually come to admire the fantastic shapes into which the coarse-grained grabites, which are reddicsh in fact have been eroded. The occurence of assemblages of boulder piles involves their subsurface initiation by differential weathering and the stripping of the saprolite by marine processes. Following their exhumation, basins and flutes have developed on the granite outcrops under subaerial conditions. At all scales of analysis, the "Pink Granite" coast exhibits an assemblage of landforms, which are not specific of coastal environments, illustrating the concept of convergence or equifinalty, that is, the production of similar landforms by different processes.
The Pink Granite coast (Northern Brittany)
Mise à jour :
20 janvier 2013
géomorphologie
roche
Lien vers la ressource
Type de document
Livre / Chapitre de livre
Auteurs personnes
Lageat, Y.
Éditeur
Springer
Date de parution
20 janvier 2013
Langue
Anglais