Enjoy the view of working fishing boats, the Cat Ferry passing in and out of the Yarmouth Harbour or become mesmerized by the beauty of the sea. Also a wonderful place for a picnic, there are over 19 acres of well groomed grounds surrounding the light allowing visitors to appreciate the magnificent scenery.

The Leif Erikson Park, located at the southern tip of the site, is surrounded by water and a great photo opportunity to watch sunsets.

Find a Hidden Treasure - There are a few geo-cached on site!
 

Rock_Point.JPG

The rocks of Yarmouth County are representative of four geological periods in Earth's history.

  • Cambrian Period - sedimentary and metamorphic rocks 570,000,000 to 505,000,000 years old

  • Ordovician Period - metamorphic rocks 505,000,000 to 438,000,000 years old

  • Silurian Period - igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic rocks 438,000,000 to 408,000,000 years old

  • Devonian Period - igneous rocks 408,000,000 to 374,000,000 years old

Smooth_Rock.JPG

The Cambrian and Ordovician rocks make up the Meguma Group which includes sandstones, siltstones, slates, and conglomerates. In the past gold was produced from Meguma rocks. This group of rocks underlie most of Yarmouth County. Ordovician and Silurian rocks form the White Rock Formation which includes sandstones, siltstones, shales, conglomerates and the volcanic rock seen at Cape Forchu. Devonian granites occur in northeastern Yarmouth County and have been mined for their tin, zinc, and copper.

Water_Rock.JPG

The rocks seen at Cape Forchu are the volcanic rocks of the White Rock Formation. These are composed of water-lain volcanic tuff with scattered volcanic bombs, thick lava flows, volcanic ash flows and volcanic conglomerates. In several areas these ancient rocks are interbedded with marine sediments. This has lead geologists to believe that these rocks record the evolution of volcanic islands through prehistoric submarine volcanic eruptions.

Dark_Rocks.JPG

The absence of fossils indicates these rocks formed in a cold and hostile marine environment. The rocks that now form Cape Forchu formed off the coast of what is presently North Africa and joined the fossil-rich rocks of northern Nova Scotia through the processes of continental drift. It is interesting to note that the classic examples seen from the observation area were already 200,000,000 years old when the earliest dinosaurs began roaming our planet.


 


Copyright 2008 The Friends of the Yarmouth Light Society

Site design by Karen Hipson