Monolith Is World's Tallest Freestanding Rock


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Rising 1,421 feet (433 meters) above the North-Central Mexican state of Quer?taro, Pe?a de Bernal Natural Monument is the tallest freestanding rock in the world.

The monolith ? a large geologic feature made up of a single massive stone ? marks the entrance to the Sierra Gorda, a mountainous area that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization declared a Biosphere Reserve in 2001. More recently, in 2009, the rock itself was named an Intangible Cultural Heritage site by UNESCO. Yet, despite all its accolades, Pe?a de Bernal has largely remained a mystery to geologists; uncertainties surround its origin, its age, even its composition.

Now, a new study led by researchers at the National Autonomous University of Mexico fills many of these gaps.

The findings, published online April 4 in the journal Geosphere, include the first accurate measurement of Pe?a de Bernal's height, which ranks it as the tallest monolith on the planet, surpassing the Rock of Gibraltar on the Iberian Peninsula (which comes in at 1,398 feet [426 meters]) and Brazil's Sugarloaf Mountain (1,299 feet [396 meters]). Earlier guesses of Pe?a de Bernal?s height ranged from 945 to 1,181 feet (re288 to 360 meters), and likely underestimated the true height because reaching the summit is difficult.

The monolith is composed of dacite, a type of volcanic rock; 67 percent of its bulk is silica, a mineral that is quite resistant to weathering, which explains how the peak has survived eons of wind, rain and weathering and still towers above its surroundings. The volcanic dacite formed a large dome that forcefully intruded, or pushed its way up through, the surrounding rock after the dacite dome had mostly solidified, the researchers found.

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Doesn't look "freestanding" to me. It looks embedded in the ground, which is probably why it's still upright.

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Doesn't look "freestanding" to me. It looks embedded in the ground, which is probably why it's still upright.

They probably mean that their is a small freestanding rock on top of the pictured mountain.

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