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XX.—A Bathymetrical and Geological Study of the Lakes of Snowdonia and Eastern Carnarvonshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2012

T. J. Jehu
Affiliation:
Heriot Fellow of the University of Edinburgh.

Extract

The study of lakes has received more attention on the Continent than it has in our own country. The inland waters of France and Switzerland have been most carefully surveyed, and in America accurate soundings of many of the lakes have been made by the Geological Surveys. But until recent years this work has been almost altogether neglected in Britain; the Government had considered it to be outside the function of the Ordnance Survey, and though of importance to geological research, it has not been undertaken by the Geological Survey. The absence of adequate knowledge concerning the forms of the basins occupied by the lakes has been a serious obstacle to the geological inquiry as to the mode of origin of these basins. But recently, in the English Lake District and in Scotland, this obstacle has been removed to a great extent through the work of geographers, who have carried out a very complete bathymetrical survey of many of the lakes of those regions; and the importance of this work has been recognised by geologists. But in North Wales not only had no attempt been made to ascertain the configuration of the lake-beds, but in many cases even the depths of the lakes remained unknown.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1905

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References

page 439 note * Geol. Mag. 1897, p. 404.