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Geological Studies in the Dublin District: III. Some New Methods in the Study of Rock-jointing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

Jointing in rocks is a key to the strains and movements they have undergone. In rocks which have had a simple history we expect to find a simple arrangement of joint planes: in old rocks we expect to find evidence of several series of tectonic movements and hence complicated jointing. For example, in the Cambrian quartzite south of Dublin the joint planes appear to run in all directions with no obviously dominant trend. But if say fifty readings taken haphazard in one of the quarries are carefully analysed it becomes evident that the joints tend to lie in certain directions, which, if a graphical method is used, appear as “peaks” on the diagram. On examining other exposures it becomes clear that some of these peaks are of regional significance, for they recur on the diagrams for many or all of the quartzite quarries. The diagrams also show, what is not evident in the field, that in certain directions jointing is almost entirely absent.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1929

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References

REFERENCES

(1) Smithson, F.Geological Studies in the Dublin District: II, The Problem of Carrickgollogan,” Geol. Mag., Vol. LXV, 1928, pp. 85–6.Google Scholar
(2) O'Reilly, J. P.On the Directions of Main Lines of Jointing Observable in the Rocks about the Bay of Dublin and their Relation with the Adjacent Coast Lines,” parts i, ii, and iii, Proc. Roy. Irish Aced., 1880, vol. iii (2nd series), p. 295; 1884, vol. iv (2nd series), p. 116; 1889, vol. i (3rd series), p. 229.Google Scholar
(3) Smithson, F. “Geological Studies in the Dublin District,” Ph.D. Thesis, University of London.Google Scholar
(4) Cole, G. A. J.The Problem of the Bray Series,” Proc. Roy. Irish Aced., vol. XXXVi B, 1921, pp. 110.Google Scholar