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On the Glacial Drift of Furness, Lancashire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2016

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Extract

The following sketch of the glacial deposits of Furness is not pretended to be complete ; it is, in fact, nothing but a sketch: neither can it presume to be free from errors. The marine drift, especially, has not received all the attention it demands, but will, I hope, with the clays and peats of Furness, form a subject for a future memoir. The deposits in the section are referred doubtfully to their periods.

Striated Bock Surfaces.—The district of Furness; its south-eastern part, however, does not perhaps present so many of those remarkable records of the glacial period, the striated rock-surfaces, as are to be met with in more mountainous districts. The rocks, especially the Carboniferous Limestone and Permian formations, either lie in agreat measure hidden under a thick covering of deposits, or, as in the hills of the Upper Silurian strata, are of such a soft decomposing nature, that they retain very little primitive facing.

Occasionally, however, striations may be found. A little way in shore, west from the estuary of the Crake, at the head of Morecambe Bay, a rock-surface recently exposed by the removal of the overlying material, and now quarried away, showed a series of parallel shallow groovings from an inch to an inch and a half apart; the intervening spaces plane and smoothed, and having very fine striæ. The striæ and grooving had a direction from E. to W., or perhaps a little N.E. to S.W.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1864

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References

page 211 note * Geikie, ‘On the Phenomena of the Glacial Drift of Scotland.’

page 211 note † Hull, Edin. New Phil. Journal, vol. xi. p. 31, 1860.

page 211 note ‡ Gool, Evidence of the Antiq. of Man.