The basaltic rocks of the Arctic region
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
Extract
The widespread basaltic rocks of tile Brito-krctic province, like those of the Deccan and Columbia basalt plateaux, do not seem to have received from petrologists the attention they deserve. Descriptions of particular localities and their rocks are not lacking, and the British region in particular has become classic through the investigations of Judd, Sir A. Geikie, and Dr. Harker, but hitherto no attempt has been made to survey the province as a whole, except in the most general way.
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- Research Article
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- Mineralogical magazine and journal of the Mineralogical Society , Volume 18 , Issue 85 , August 1918 , pp. 180 - 223
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- Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1918
References
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A. G. Nathorst, Einiges uber die Basalte des Arktischen Gebietes. Ibid., 1892, vol. xiv, p. 69.
See also ibid.. 1901. vol. xxiii, p..341, and Bull. Geol. Inst. Univ. Upsala, 1910, vol. x, p. 316.
page 206 note * Unfortunately this improbable constituent is described as the 'difference entre la détermination colorimétrique et gravimétrique de TiO2'. Goldschmidt accepts the colorimetric estimation and adds the difference to Al2O3, which, probably, it is more likely to be than anything else.
page 209 note 1 A very similar rock occurs on Oans Island, Spitzbergen. As far as Lindström's (1867) analysis goes (for the alkalis were not determined) it is closely like the Sassendal basalt and 2.97 per cent. of TiO2 is recorded. See R. von Drasche, Tschermak's Min. Mirth., 1874, pp. 263-265. Most of the analyses, however, show a lower content of titanium dioxide.
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page 215 note 1 This colour in pyroxencs is almost certainly due to titanium in the presence of soda. The alternative suggestion that it is due to manganese is negatived by chemical evidence.
page 216 note 1 See Summ. Progr. Geol. Survey, Great Britain, for 1915, 1916, pp. 26-27.
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page 221 note 1 W. F. Hillebrand, The analysis of silicate and carbonate racks. Bull. U.S. Geol. Survey, 1910, No. 422.
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