Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-8bljj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-28T19:59:03.710Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

II.—A Systematic Nomenclature for Igneous Rocks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

H. Stanley Jevons
Affiliation:
Assistant Demonstrator in Petrology in the Woodwardian Museum, Cambridge.

Extract

The present nomenclature of igneous rocks is generally acknowledged to be unsatisfactory, for not only is it without useful meaning, but it is also so unsystematic that it forms a severe tax upon the memory. The manifest and urgent need of reform, which these circumstances create, must be my excuse for presenting in a short note a suggestion likely to require much elaboration. A systematic nomenclature, I need hardly say, can only rest upon a systematic classification, so that the proposals I shall herewith make would have been fitly accompanied by an attempt at producing a classification of the kind. As I have found, however, that much expenditure of time and labour will be necessary to accomplish this task, I have decided upon publishing at once certain proposals with regard to nomenclature, which could be largely applied to classifications at present in use.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1901

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 304 note 1 I use the term family throughout in the sense in which it is used by Rosenbusch in his “Elemente der Gesteinslehre,” that is to say, for groups like the granites, diorites, etc.

page 305 note 1 See Rosiwal, A.: Verhandlungen der k. k. geol. Reichs-Anstalt, 1898, p. 143.Google Scholar

page 306 note 1 The word schliere is here used in the sense defined by Rosenbusch (“Elemente der Gesteinslehre,1898, p. 41)Google Scholar, Reyer, (“Theoretische Geologie,” p. 81)Google Scholar, and Zirkel, (“Petrographie,1893, i, p. 787)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. It has been introduced into the English language by Holland, (“The Charnockite Series”: Mem. Geol. Surv. India, vol. xxviii, p. 217).Google Scholar

page 310 note 1 The name was given by Rosenbusch in 1877. He himself anticipates the objection which I am about to raise (see Mik. Phys., 1877, ii, p. 204), and proposes that, if it be insisted on, the name foyaite should be adopted instead.Google Scholar

page 313 note 1 The a of natro- and of kali- is pronounced long as in ‘state.’ The i of kali- is short as in ‘pit,’ but it is dropped in the name kalijolite, in which the first i should be pronounced long as in ‘write.’

page 314 note 1 See footnote on preceding page.

page 314 note 2 See “Elemente der Gesteinslehre,1898, and Mikr. Phys., 1896, vol. ii.Google Scholar