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Thrusting and other movements in the Durham Permian

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

C. T. Trechmann
Affiliation:
Hudworth Tower, Castle Eden, Co. Durham.

Abstract

The Permian in Durham is the most internally disturbed of the newer or covering beds of England. In deep borings it is a dark dolomitic rock full of sulphates and chlorides; at the surface it has quite a different appearance. The Permian and overlying Secondary beds seem to have been lowered by downwarping. During the subsequent differential uplift and denudation the area remained a land surface and the sulphates were removed by penetrating water, not by subaerial weathering. Horizontal and low angle thrusts occur in the Sunderland area above about the middle of the underlying Coal Measure basin. The movements may have been induced by diminution in rock volume following solution and segregation accompanied by attraction or packing together of the mass of the formation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1954

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References

REFERENCES

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(1) A case of thrust and crush brecciation in the Magnesian Limestone of County Durham. Univ. Durham Phil. Soc. Mem., 1, 1909. Deals with the coast from Marsden to Trow Rocks.Google Scholar
(2) The Geology of North-East Durham and South-East Northumberland. Proc. Geol. Assoc., xxiv, 1913, 87107. States that the thrusting is directed against the Lake District horst.Google Scholar
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(4) On sections in the Lower Permian rocks at Claxheugh. Trans. Nat. Hist. Soc. of Northumberland and Durham. New Series, v, pt. 1, 1918. Refers to my description of the anhydrite mass at Hartlepool and gives a photograph of the grooves on the underside of the Shell Limestone at Claxheugh.Google Scholar
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