No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
The manganese nodules occur in greater or less quantity all over the ocean-bed, and most abundantly in the Pacific. They occur of all sizes, from minute grains to masses of a pound weight, and even greater, and form nodular concretions of concentric shells, round a nucleus, which is very frequently a piece of pumice or a shark's tooth. Their outside has a peculiar and very characteristic mammillated surface, which enables them to be identified at a glance. When freshly brought up they are very soft, being easily scraped to powder with a knife. They gradually get harder on exposure to the air.