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View Full Version : Caithness to become the new Orcadian Island



Kenn
01-Apr-06, 00:27
As many of you will be aware Caithness is largely composed of sedimentary rocks i.e. slate,clay and small pockets of Devonian red sandstone.These were raised from the ocean bed many millions of years ago.
Being soft rocks, they are easily permeated by water which when it freezes in winter causes them to crack and slide along the the tilt of the layers.
To the south and west are the volcanicaly formed granite ranges of Sutherland that extend all the way to The Great Glen along which runs a fault line and is an area that is still subject to earth tremors . (The Kessock Bridge is the only one in the UK that is built to withstand these.) This fault line is active and the tectonic plates are slowly making the glen expand.The pressure exerted by this is dispersed very slowly but moves inexorably north through the mountain ranges and will ultimately result in transference to the soft line of the northern slates and clays causing any cracks and fissures to rapidly expand.
Already the two main rivers of Caithness, one flowing north to Thurso and the other east to Wick have little land separation between their sources.With the expected effect of global warming which will result in much higher rainfall levels in the far north and the resulting saturation of the high hills will cause them to expand to cope with the extra volumn of water and with the added flow the erosion along their courses will increase in the same ratio.
It is therefore expected that when all these factors are taken into account istis a definite probablity that Caithness will become an island within the next two millenia.

www.national geo-physical.uk/NS/dept10apr1

canuck
01-Apr-06, 00:55
John Bell of Iona was trying to explain this to me a few weeks ago. I got the impression that something serious would be happening within a hundred years, but that might just have been a dramatic rise in water levels.

_Ju_
01-Apr-06, 11:44
www.national geo-physical.uk/NS/dept10apr1

a url that ends in apr1?:lol: :lol: ;)

MadPict
01-Apr-06, 15:00
It is therefore expected that when all these factors are taken into account istis a definite probablity that Caithness will become an island within the next two millenia.

www.national geo-physical.uk/NS/dept10apr1

And with the added propulsion from the 100's of windturbines that'll be erected in Caithness it may well sail past the Faroes.........

Kenn
01-Apr-06, 22:08
Forgot to factor that into the equation Madpict..make that within this millenia!

teuchter
01-Apr-06, 22:20
And with the added propulsion from the 100's of windturbines that'll be erected in Caithness it may well sail past the Faroes.........

Any chance that by the time weve passed the Faroes, somebodies going to have worked out how to steer this thing? If we head south for long enough , just west of Tenerife would surely be a good place to drop anchor im thinking.

MadPict
01-Apr-06, 22:32
Forgot to factor that into the equation Madpict..make that within this millenia!

Heh - I had worked this one out way back when we were arguing back and forth about wind farms - seems some of those threads have been blown away....:(