There are some parts of AlUla that have dark rocks exposed, not the typical sandstones that are iconic to the region. Enormous areas covering hundreds of square kilometres of flat, black rocks. These are the remains of relatively recent lava flows. Between 10 million and just half a million years ago, AlUla would have been even hotter than it is today, as volcanoes erupted across the landscape. They were not the typical explosive type you might imagine when you think of volcanoes, like Mount Fuji or Mount St Helens, which form from the melting of the Earth’s crust as it is forced down into the Earth (called subduction).
The volcanoes in AlUla formed in a very different way. An enormous bubble of magma rose from deep inside the Earth. Sometimes these giant bubbles of molten rock do not reach the surface and cool forming huge granite formations. When they do reach the surface, volcanoes form. And on Harrat Uwayrid, the largest nature reserve in AlUla, there are dozens of extinct volcanoes scattering the landscape. This shows that it must have been an incredibly active place, with many volcanoes active at once.
The black rocks that can be found on these volcanic fields (which are called harrats) are basalt. This is a very pure rock that has small crystals, and it was formed from hot magma from inside the Earth, not from other melted rock. Basalt is a lot harder than sandstone, and where it has erupted, it has covered the older sandstone and protected it from erosion.
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