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Calcite crystals from a water-tank

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Russell F. Gwinnell*
Affiliation:
Imperial College of Science and Technology

Extract

A crystalline deposit of sufficient interest to warrant description was brought to the authore notice by Mr. Henry Preston, F.G.S., who has recently described its mode of occurrence. The material consists of a white, glistening, crystalline powder, or a sand-like aggregate of minute crystals. It was deposited in a water-tank into which water was led through an old leaden pipe, over a mile in length, from a spring rising from the basal ferruginous beds of the Marlstone (Middle Lias) ill Belton Park, north of Grantham, Lincolnshire. The sand was deposited in the tank as a conical heap, spreading over a base of perhaps four square yards and reaching a height of seven or eight inches at its summit.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1913, The Mineralogical Society

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References

page 345 note 2 Preston, H., ‘ Calcite sand at Belton, Grantham’ Trans. Lincolnshire Naturalists’ Union, 1912 (for 1911), vol. ii, pp. 307-308Google Scholar.

page 347 note 1 C.G. Cullis, ‘On a peculiarity in the mineralogical constitution of the Keuper Marl,’ Rep. British Assoc. (Leicester), 1907, p. 507.