Boulder

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File:Balanced Rock.jpg
This balancing boulder, "Balanced Rock", stands in Garden of the Gods park in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States.
File:Kämmenkivi stone in Pisa, Kuopio, Finland.jpg
Kämmenkivi stone on the Pisa hill in Kuopio, Finland
File:Bolders on Mahendra Hills, India.jpg
2'500 Million years old rocks on a hill in Hyderabad, India.

In geology, a boulder (or rarely bowlder)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> is a rock fragment with size greater than Template:Convert in diameter.<ref name="Glossary2005">Template:Cite book</ref> Smaller pieces are called cobbles and pebbles. While a boulder may be small enough to move or roll manually, others are extremely massive.<ref name="Boulder">Template:Cite dictionary</ref> In common usage, a boulder is too large for a person to move. Smaller boulders are usually just called rocks or stones.

EtymologyEdit

The word boulder derives from boulder stone, from Middle English bulderston or Swedish bullersten.<ref>boulder. (n.d.) Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved December 9, 2011, from Dictionary.com website.</ref>

AboutEdit

In places covered by ice sheets during ice ages, such as Scandinavia, northern North America, and Siberia, glacial erratics are common. Erratics are boulders picked up by ice sheets during their advance, and deposited when they melt.<ref name="Boulder" /> These boulders are called "erratic" because they typically are of a different rock type than the bedrock on which they are deposited. One such boulder is used as the pedestal of the Bronze Horseman in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

Some noted rock formations involve giant boulders exposed by erosion, such as the Devil's Marbles in Australia's Northern Territory, the Horeke basalts in New Zealand, where an entire valley contains only boulders, and The Baths on the island of Virgin Gorda in the British Virgin Islands.

Boulder-sized clasts are found in some sedimentary rocks, such as coarse conglomerate and boulder clay.

See alsoEdit

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