Stalactite

   

A stalactice hanging above subterranean water. Notice the water reflection.
Enlarge
A stalactice hanging above subterranean water. Notice the water reflection.

A stalactite (Greek stalaktos, "dripping") or dripstone 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.

Formation of stalactites.
Enlarge
Formation of stalactites.

Related topics

da:Stalaktit de:Tropfstein nl:Druipsteen


Retrieved from "http://www.mywiseowl.com/articles/Stalactite"

This page has been accessed 454 times. This page was last modified 18:46, 24 Nov 2004. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see Copyrights for details).