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XXI.–The Geognosy and Mineralogy of Scotland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
Abstract
The localities of geognostic interest in this large island have been referred to in the general description of the islands, and its mineralogy alone now remains to be considered.
It has been remarked above, that the muddy silts which, impregnated with the putrescent pitch of fermenting organisms, form the great mass of the flags of the “Old Red,” are exceptionally barren in minerals of interest. The cauce of this is not far to seek :—the components of such silts are not themselves those which go to the formation of many mineral bodies ;—nor have they been subjected to the metamorphic stimulus which excites to a chemical union of ingredients and elements which lie merely in the contact of granular apposition.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Mineralogical magazine and journal of the Mineralogical Society , Volume 3 , Issue 16 , March 1880 , pp. 219 - 251
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1880
References
Page 220 Note * Author of a meritorious monograph of Quartz and Opal.
Page 228 Note * "Summers and winters in the Orkneys."—Gorrie.
Page 236 Note * Pennant. Mr. Anderson, in his introduction to Low's work, very clearly shews the vampire character of Pennant's friendship for Low.
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