The Geology of England and Wales: A Concise Account of the Lithological Characters, Leading Fossils, and Economic Products of the Rocks; with Notes on the Physical Features of the Country |
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Page 21
... derived from words which mean ' ancient life , ' is applied to the oldest known rocks that form the crust of the earth . They are the Primary ' rocks with which the Geologist has to deal ; and although this latter term is now but little ...
... derived from words which mean ' ancient life , ' is applied to the oldest known rocks that form the crust of the earth . They are the Primary ' rocks with which the Geologist has to deal ; and although this latter term is now but little ...
Page 24
... Cambrian age , including ( according to Mr. Hicks ) some old quartz - con- glomerate and dark green shales . CAMBRIAN . · This term is derived from Cambria , 24 CH . I. GEOLOGY OF ENGLAND AND WALES . FIG PAGE 1 General Section of Malvern.
... Cambrian age , including ( according to Mr. Hicks ) some old quartz - con- glomerate and dark green shales . CAMBRIAN . · This term is derived from Cambria , 24 CH . I. GEOLOGY OF ENGLAND AND WALES . FIG PAGE 1 General Section of Malvern.
Page 25
... derived from Cambria , the old name for Wales , and as a group it is equivalent in part to the Cum- brian ' series of the Lake District . About the year 1834 the name Cambrian was given by Sedgwick to the great mass of the slaty rocks ...
... derived from Cambria , the old name for Wales , and as a group it is equivalent in part to the Cum- brian ' series of the Lake District . About the year 1834 the name Cambrian was given by Sedgwick to the great mass of the slaty rocks ...
Page 54
... at Applethwaite Common they are succeeded by higher strata belonging to the same series , to which Sedgwick gave the name Sheerbate Flags . ' WOOLHOPE BEDS . The term ' Woolhope ' is derived 54 CH . II . GEOLOGY OF ENGLAND AND WALES .
... at Applethwaite Common they are succeeded by higher strata belonging to the same series , to which Sedgwick gave the name Sheerbate Flags . ' WOOLHOPE BEDS . The term ' Woolhope ' is derived 54 CH . II . GEOLOGY OF ENGLAND AND WALES .
Page 55
... derived from the occurrence of these strata at Woolhope , near Hereford . The Woolhope Limestone and Shale are regarded as forming a subordinate part of the Wenlock formation . This formation , which rests on the Upper Llandovery rocks ...
... derived from the occurrence of these strata at Woolhope , near Hereford . The Woolhope Limestone and Shale are regarded as forming a subordinate part of the Wenlock formation . This formation , which rests on the Upper Llandovery rocks ...
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Common terms and phrases
30 feet Ammonites attain a thickness Bagshot Beds Bala bands Boulder breccia brickearth calcareous Cambrian carbonate Carboniferous Limestone Chalk Chillesford clayey cliffs coal Coal-field Coal-measures colour conglomerate considered consists containing Coral Rag Crag denudation deposits Derbyshire Devon Devonian district divisions Dorsetshire escarpment Estuarine feet in thickness flags flints Forest formation formed fossiliferous fossils Fuller's Earth Gault geological Glacial gravel grey Hill igneous Inferior Oolite Keuper Kimeridge lime Lincolnshire Lingula lithological localities London Clay lower beds Lower Greensand Lower Lias Magnesian Limestone marine Marl Mendip Mendip Hills Middle Millstone Grit Mollusca Murchison nodules North Northampton Sand occur Old Red Sandstone organic remains Ostrea palæontological Palæozoic pebbles Permian Phillips places portion Prof quarried Red Marl Rhætic beds rocks sand sandy seams Sedgwick shales shells Silurian slates slaty Somersetshire sometimes species stone strata term thin tract unconformably Upper Greensand Upper Lias Valley Wealden Wenlock yielded Yoredale Yorkshire
Popular passages
Page 454 - FREDERICK M°CoY, FGS One vol., Royal 410. Plates, /i. is. A CATALOGUE OF THE COLLECTION OF CAMBRIAN AND SILURIAN FOSSILS contained in the Geological Museum of the University of Cambridge, by JW SALTER, FGS With a Portrait of PROFESSOR SEDGWICK.
Page 433 - The variation of species, and natural selection or the survival of the fittest in the struggle for existence, are Natural History facts, and the consideration of these facts as brought prominently into notice by Darwin, has led to the doctrine of the Evolution of Life being regarded as the " Fundamental Truth of Biology." When, therefore, we hear the subject treated...
Page 386 - Conein-coue,' as the seam of ironstone breaks into conical forms with the bases of the cones at top and bottom of the seam, and their apices pointing inwards towards each other. The surfaces of these cones are corrugated by small horizontal fretted wavelets, or ridges, rather resembling those on the outside of some stalactites, and each cone is concentrically enveloped by several coats, the surface of each being similarly corrugated.
Page 365 - ... in a horizontal or nearly horizontal direction, following the sweep of the hillside whether curved or straight. The boundary line between these several strips may have been originally only a mathematical one, connecting, say, two mere-stones, and yet a bank will soon have been formed along it. For each upper cultivator will naturally have taken care not to allow the soil of his strip to descend to fertilize his neighbour's below. He would draw the lower limit of his strip by a reversed furrow,...
Page 117 - The boundary between them may be roughly marked off by a line running from the mouth of the Tees to the mouth of the Exe.
Page 302 - Upward of 200,000 years ago the earth — as we know from the calculations of astronomers — was so placed in regard to the sun that a series of physical changes was induced which eventually resulted in conferring upon our hemisphere a most intensely severe climate. All northern Europe and northern America disappeared beneath a thick crust of ice and snow, and the glaciers of such regions as Switzerland assumed gigantic proportions.
Page 21 - Now does this mean that it may have been two, or three, or four hundred million years ? Because this really makes all the difference.
Page 286 - ... extending from the river Aide on the north, to the southern extremity of the deposit in Essex. Of these four stages, the 4th is the most constant and important, the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd being frequently either concealed by, or destroyed during the formation of, the succeeding stages. At Walton-on-the-Naze alone do any of the four lower stages contain evidence of being a subaqueous deposit; there the 1st stage is so, but it is covered by two reef stages, and these again by the 5th stage. The 5th...
Page 385 - ... lead, and many others ; a slight trace of copper in the Bath waters being exceptional. Nevertheless, there is a strong presumption that there exists some relationship between the action of thermal waters and the filling of rents with metallic ores. The component elements of these ores may, in the first instance, rise from great depths in a state of sublimation or of solution in intensely heated water, and may then be precipitated on the walls of a fissure as soon as the ascending vapors or fluids...
Page 13 - formation," which I have used in the above explanation, expresses in geology any assemblage of rocks which have some character in common, whether of origin, age, or composition.