Vesuvius Bay







Most of Salt Spring Island consists of folded sedimentary rocks of the Cretaceous Nanaimo group.  They range from conglomerates to finely bedded turbidites.

The structure of the folded rocks appears at various scales - from the overall shape of the Gulf Islands to small-scale deformation within individual outcrops.  Locally, they conspired with the glaciers to form narrow inlets, often with small pocket beaches tucked into their ends.



AERIAL VIEW (Google Maps)

The beach in Vesuvius Bay is a nice example of a small pocket beach perched on top of steeply-dipping Nanaimo silts and sands. The slowly eroding bedrock probably doesn't generate much sediment, so the beach probably accretes very slowly, if at all.

There are many other pocket beaches on Salt Spring - some I've visited before (Beddis Beach 2008, Southey Point 2010), some I'll visit in the next few posts.






Related Posts :

  • French BeachThe south coast of Vancouver Island from Sooke west to Port Renfrew forms the northern shore of the … Read More...
  • Sombrio BeachI drove down the dirt road, passing one car on its way out, sort of expecting to find the place empt… Read More...
  • China Beach China Beach is another southwest facing beach, but it doesn't look at all like French Beach. &… Read More...
  • Pacheedaht BeachI've seen this referred to as Port Renfrew Beach and as San Juan Beach, but I've chosen to use the F… Read More...
  • Botanical BeachI almost didn't include this post, but felt I couldn't leave it out.  Botanical Beach is an ico… Read More...

0 Response to "Vesuvius Bay"

Posting Komentar

wdcfawqafwef