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III.—Eskdale Drift and its Bearing on Glacial Geology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

The extraordinary abundance and almost universal distribution of fragments of Eskdale granite through the Drift of the North-West of England and part of North Wales is an impressive fact to the student of Glacial Geology. Mackintosh was the first to systematically trace this rock through the Drift and to note its origin. Since the time of this single-minded and patient investigator many other geologists have gone over the same ground and extended his observations, and all must bear witness to the accuracy of his facts.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1893

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References

page 13 note 1 Q.J.G.J. vol. XXXIX. (1883), pp. 108111Google Scholar

page 15 note 1 Buried Valley of the Mersey. Proc. Liverpool Geol. Soc. 18721873, pp. 4265.Google Scholar

page 15 note 2 Griesbach says that he entirely failed to discover glacial scratches in the moraines at the end of the Himalayan Glaciers. (Mem. Geol. Survey of India, vol. xxiii.)Google Scholar

page 18 note 1 Mem. Geol. Survey of India, vol. xxiii.Google Scholar

page 19 note 1 “There is abundant evidence too of a strange intermingling of foreign rocks in the till, which must have travelled from the coast of Cumberland (the italics are mine), the South of Scotland and the North of Ireland’ (Sketch of the Geology of the Isle of Man—Horne—Trans, of Edinburgh Geol. Soc. vol. ii. part iii. 1874).Google Scholar

page 19 note 2 The late Mr. Clifton Ward (Geology of the Northern Part of the English Lake District, Mem. Geol. Survey) considered there were evidences of very great submergence, but as I have not visited the localities he names, and am not clear as to the grounds on which he judged the Drifts he mentions to be Marine, I cannot use his observations.