List of geographical tors

The following list enumerate and expand on notable tors.

Tors in Great Britain edit

Dartmoor edit

 
Panorama of some of Dartmoor's tors in the snow

Dartmoor represents one of the largest areas of exposed granite in the United Kingdom, covering an area of 368 square miles (950 km2).[1] It is part of a chain of granite stretching through Cornwall, as far as the Isles of Scilly.

Some of the more durable granite survived to form the rocky crowns of Dartmoor tors. One of the best known[citation needed] is at Haytor (50°34′49″N 3°45′19″W / 50.5802°N 3.7552°W / 50.5802; -3.7552) on the eastern part of the moor, whose granite is of unusually fine quality and was quarried from the hillside below the tor during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Its stone was used to construct the pillars outside the British Museum in London, and to build London Bridge. The last granite to be quarried there was used to build Exeter War Memorial in 1919.

Ten Tors is an annual weekend hike on Dartmoor.

 
Hawk's Tor, Bodmin Moor, Cornwall

Cornwall edit

Hills:

Peak District edit

There are many tors in this area, notably in the Dark Peak where the host rock is Millstone Grit:

  • Back Tor, Derwent Edge (538m)
  • Carl Wark, Hathersage Moor
  • Chee Tor, Buxton
  • Dovestone Tor, Derwent Edge (505m)
  • Great Tor, Bamford
 
Higger Tor
  • Higger Tor (384m) and Over Owler Tor (375m)
  • Howshaw Tor overlooking Sheffield
  • Ladybower Tor, Upper Derwent Valley
  • Low Tor, Bradfield Moors
  • The Salt Cellar on Derwent Edge
  • Mam Tor, Edale
  • Owler Tor, Burbage, [53.3167,-1.6206]
  • Whinstone Lee Tor
  • White Tor, Derwent Moors (487m)


In addition there are hills which incorporate 'tor' in their name but yet do not feature the geomorphological feature described in this article. Examples include Mam Tor and Shining Tor.[2]

Pennines edit

Scotland edit

There are numerous tors developed in the Cairngorm granite in the Scottish Highlands:

Other areas edit

Tor Bay, one of the sandy beaches near Oxwich Bay on the Gower Peninsula in south Wales, is so-called because the beach is framed by a huge outcrop of Carboniferous Limestone.

Tors in other regions edit

Africa edit

 
Mkani, a celebrated tor near Cheredzi, Zimbabwe

Germany edit

 
Externsteine, Germany

India edit

Tors are very commonly found in the Telangana and the Rayalaseema regions of Andhra Pradesh

Malaysia edit

North America edit

 
Part of the Angel Rocks formation in Alaska
 
Stone Mountain is a quartz monzonite dome monadnock and the site of Stone Mountain Park near Stone Mountain, Georgia.

New Zealand edit

Spain edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dartmoor National Park Authority website. Retrieved 12 October 2008 Archived 5 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 scale Explorer map sheets OL1 Dark Peak area & OL24 White Peak area
  3. ^ a b c Twidale, C.R. (1995). "Bornhardts, Boulders and Inselbergs". Cadernos do Laboratorio Xeolóxico de Laxe. 20: 347–380.