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On the Tectonics of the Southern Midlands

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

In any purely stratigraphical treatment of a tectonic problem one of the greatest of the initial difficulties is always that of deciding where to begin, and in the present case this difficulty is unusually acute, since the primary object of the investigation is an endeavour to trace back phenomena occurring in later ages to causes of long antecedent origin. In more precise language, the object aimed at is to show that certain structural features of the Mesozoic rocks of the southern Midlands of England can be attributed to the recurrence of activity along old-established fold-lines of very early date.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1925

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References

page 193 note 1 Final Report of the Royal Commission on Coal Supplies. Part IX. Report of the Geological Committee upon the Resources of the Concealed and Unproved Coalfields of the United Kingdom, 1905. [Cd. 2361.] Subsequently cited, for the sake of brevity, as Final Report of the Coal Commission, 1905.Google Scholar

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page 203 note 1 In a remarkable paper Mr. E. Hull proved clearly the thinning of the Jurassic rocks towards the S.E., but missed the obvious inference of an overlap. However, this paper contains a wonderful forecast of the character of the Palaeozoic floor, considering the scanty data then available. (Q.J.G.S., vol. xvi, 1860, pp. 7381.) This paper should be ranked with God win-Austen's great memoir on the area south of the Thames, published four years earlierGoogle Scholar. Ibid., vol. xii, 1856.

page 203 note 2 Full details of these bores will be found in the Coal Commission Report, and in Sir A. Strahan's Presidential Address to the Geological Society, 1913, “Thicknesses of Strata”: Mem. Geol. Surv., 1916, pp. 67. See also Beeby Thompson in Geology in the Field, p. 452, H. J. Eunson., Q.J.G.S., vol. xl, 1884, p. 482.Google Scholar

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page 222 note 1 Most of the metamorphic minerals in the Lower Greensand are very much rounded, looking as if they were second-hand, and not derived directly from crystalline schists. There are marked differences between the heavy minerals of the Norfolk and Bedfordshire areas, showing derivation from different sources. The very abundant iron oxide may also have been supplied from the denudation of Coal-measure ironstones.Google Scholar

page 222 note 2 See Baker, H. A., “Evidence Suggestive of Charnian Movement in East Kent”: Geol. Mag., 1917, pp. 398403. This author suggests the existence of another Charnoid ridge, running under Suffolk, and outside of East Kent. This point is not discussed in the present paper.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

page 222 note 3 Baker, H. A., loc. cit.Google Scholar