Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, Volume 1Society, 1870 |
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Page 11
... gravels , whose origin yet remained a perplexing but most interesting problem . As to recent forma- tions , he directed attention to the pre - historic barrows , shell- mounds , crannoges , and bone - caverns of the OPENING ADDRESS . 11.
... gravels , whose origin yet remained a perplexing but most interesting problem . As to recent forma- tions , he directed attention to the pre - historic barrows , shell- mounds , crannoges , and bone - caverns of the OPENING ADDRESS . 11.
Page 38
... gravel are got at Cameron's cottage , Chapel , Braehead , and Way- gateshaw ( some of the sand is highly charged with saline par- ticles ) , evidently bearing out great physical changes of a recent geological era . Clays of various ...
... gravel are got at Cameron's cottage , Chapel , Braehead , and Way- gateshaw ( some of the sand is highly charged with saline par- ticles ) , evidently bearing out great physical changes of a recent geological era . Clays of various ...
Page 83
... gravel . When we reached the loch we began to search it for evidence of life ; it is famed for trout , but it was the more minute life we desired . The most abundant form we found was larvæ of the May - fly ; we found also a small ...
... gravel . When we reached the loch we began to search it for evidence of life ; it is famed for trout , but it was the more minute life we desired . The most abundant form we found was larvæ of the May - fly ; we found also a small ...
Page 91
... gravel ; while the subjacent rocks are all rounded and polished , and grooved precisely like those of existing glacier regions . No known agency , save land ice , produces such smoothings and groovings ; none but the glacier leaves such ...
... gravel ; while the subjacent rocks are all rounded and polished , and grooved precisely like those of existing glacier regions . No known agency , save land ice , produces such smoothings and groovings ; none but the glacier leaves such ...
Page 108
... gravels , or clays of the stream - beds . Several of the miners have considerable reputation as skilful and successful gold - finders , and their practised eyes are constantly finding gold in both localities , the hill sides , and the ...
... gravels , or clays of the stream - beds . Several of the miners have considerable reputation as skilful and successful gold - finders , and their practised eyes are constantly finding gold in both localities , the hill sides , and the ...
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abundant appearance basalt beds boulder clay Carboniferous character Climatius coal coast colour conglomerates crustacea debris denudation deposits depth district dorsal dyke east Edinburgh EDINBURGH GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY estuary evidence exhibited existence extending feet fish Forfarshire formation fossils fragments Geikie genera genus Geological Society geologists GEORGE LYON glacial glacier glen gold granite Graptolites gravel Haswell Holoptychius inches ironstone Island James lake basins land limestone locality Loch Loch Doon Lower Old Red Ludlow Lyne Water mass mica miles mineral moraine mountain nature North Esk observed occur Old Red Sandstone Pentland Hills period phenomena polished portion present Productus Professor Quarry remains remarkable river roches moutonnées sand Scotland seen shales shells shore side Sidlaws Silurian Silurian rocks Skiddaw Slates Slates species specimens spines stones strata striæ surface thickness tion trap Upper Old Red Upper Silurian valley vitrified Wenlock
Popular passages
Page 348 - BLAKE, WP Report upon the Precious Metals. Being Statistical Notices of the Principal Gold and Silver producing regions of the world, represented at the Paris Universal Exposition. 8vo, cloth $2.00 BLAKESLEY, TH Alternating Currents of Electricity.
Page 236 - Comparing that motion to the flow of a river, he propounded the theory that " a glacier is an imperfect fluid or a viscous body, which is urged down slopes of a certain inclination by the mutual pressure of its parts.
Page 265 - This locality is apparently on or about the south base of the west Lomond Hill, overlooking Loch Leven. Subjacent to the limestone, which is richly fossiliferous, is ochre interbedded with shale, according to Dr. M'Kelvie. This ochre abounds in globular masses of iron pyrites, known to the quarrymen as "fairy balls," from the size of a fist to that of a man's head.
Page 91 - In examining the history of mankind, as well as in examining the phenomena of the material world, when we cannot trace the process by which an event has been produced, it is often of importance to be able to show how it may have been produced by natural causes.
Page 367 - The Society meets on the First and Third Thursdays of each month, from November to May inclusive.
Page 184 - ... mind that what has life must possess more power than that which is inanimate : consequently, if there was a transfer of power by the ordinary laws of nature, it would pass from that which is alive into that which is not : that is, if it tended to an equalization, it would quit and not enter the body. But so far is this from being the case, that we find that the body receives an increase of power during sleep. There remains, therefore, but one inference to be drawn from this fact, namely, that...
Page 330 - Druinry, as ascertained by a bore put down, is 230 feet. For several miles to the east the depth is nearly as great. Consequently, if this hollow be an old river-bed, the ancient river that flowed in it must have entered the Clyde at a depth of more than 200 feet below the present sea-level ; and if so, then it follows that the rocky bed of the ancient Clyde must lie buried under more than 200 feet of surface deposits from Bowling downwards to the sea.
Page 301 - ... any hitherto described. These beds from the contained fossils appear to be Cretaceous. Everywhere the strata named form a characteristic accompaniment of the coal (especially this coarse conglomerate), and nearly everywhere it is underlain by one or more seams of coal cropping out at some point on the circuit named, though it may reasonably be supposed yet to be found on the opposite shores of British Columbia. Outcrops are seen on some of the coast-lying islands, &c. ; but it is only at Nanaimo...
Page 236 - ... to these great mountains, where he toiled with a devotion that told at last upon his physical frame. ' The lessons which he had laboriously learnt among the living ice-rivers of the Alps bore fruit when he came again to wander among the more mountainous regions of his own country. In the year 1840 Agassiz had made the startling announcement that the British Islands had once been deeply buried under a vast mantle of snow and ice, and that the traces of its seaward motion were yet fresh and clear...
Page 205 - Plans (22 in number) of various Lakes and Rivers between Lake Huron and River Ottawa ; to accompany Geological Reports for 1853 to 1856.