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IV.—Influence of Earth Movements on the Geological Strucuture of the British Isles1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

J. J. Harris Teall
Affiliation:
Late Fellow of St. John' College, Cambridge.

Extract

In the formation of a country three more or less distinct geological operations are concerned:—a. Rock formation; b. Earth movements; c. Denudation. In the case of our own country, to which the present paper more especially refers, these three operations have succeeded each other again and again; so that a very complicated structure is the result. The earth movements and denudations of one period have been interfered with by those of subsequent periods, and any attempt to trace the exact steps by which the evolution of the British Isles has been effected is therefore attended with very great difficulty.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1880

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References

page 350 note 1 Dr. Hicks now divides the Pre-Cambrian rocks into three groups, Dimetian, Arvonian, and Pebidean.

page 351 note 1 Are these rocks Cambrian or Pre-Cambrian?