El Capitan

El Capitan, Yosemite Valley

Granite monolith with 900 m tall, vertical wall. One of the most challenging climbing routes in the world.

Half Dome

Half Dome, California

Granite dome rising 1,444 m tall above the surroundings. One side of the dome looks as if sheared down, thus the mountain resembles a dome that is divided in half.

Table Rock SC

Table Rock, South Carolina

970 m tall mountain with a fairly flat surface and steep slopes of monolithic granite. This mountain is a batholith – fragment of magma that was pressed upwards during the Ordovician period some 430 million years ago.

Chillagoe Dome Rock

Impressive, rounded monolith from limestone – marble, rising above the bush.

Walga Rock

Walga Rock, Australia

Cave with extensive cliff art galleries. Here is also a drawing of an European sailing ship (contact art), most likely from the late 19th century. Such contact art is met in several locations of Australia. Other drawings are much older.

Uluru (Ayers Rock)

Uluru, Australia

One of the Australian symbols, enormous and visually very impressive sandstone inselberg, 348 meters high, and 9.4 km in circumference. A sacred place to local Aborigine peoples. Here are many springs, waterholes, caves, and rock art sites. Endemic plants.

Kata Tjuta (Mount Olga)

Kata Tjuta

Unusual, impressive monolithic rock formation, consists of 36 steep-sided domes up to 546 meters high. A sacred place to local Aboriginal people. Endemic plants.

Voltzberg

View from Voltzberg to the east, Suriname

Granite dome, one of the most easternmost inselbergs of Guayana Shield. Rises 150 m above the surroundings, comparatively easy to climb, although a climb in this enormous cliff still is dangerous. Summit covered with the sparse “muri-muri” vegetation, slopes are bare.