VI.—The Altered Clastic Rocks of the Southern Highlands, their Structure and Succession

1896 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 167-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Macnair

In the following paper I propose to give an account of some observations upon the structure and succession of the rocks of the Southern Highlands. By the term Southern Highlands I mean that part of the Scottish Highlands lying immediately to the north-west of the great line of fault separating the older rocks of the former area from the younger Old Red Sandstone series of the low grounds.

1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
pp. 301-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew R. Bennett ◽  
Geoffrey S. Boulton

AbstractThe aim of this paper is to demonstrate that much of the ‘hummocky moraine’ present within the northern part of the LochLomond Readvance ice cap formerly situated in the North West Scottish Highlands may be interpreted as suites of ice-front moraines deposited during active decay. These landforms can be used to reconstruct ice cap decay, whichleads to important insights into the shrinking form of the ice cap and associated environmental conditions. Evidence has been collected from 10803 airphotographs and from detailed field survey. It is presented at three spatial scales.


Archaeologia ◽  
1911 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 565-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. E. Balch ◽  
R. D. R. Troup

The great cavern of Wookey-Hole is situated two miles to the north-west of the city of Wells, in the centre of Somerset, and immediately adjacent to the thriving- village which has taken the name of the cavern, and has depended for its prosperity on the existence of the copious and usually pellucid stream, which here bursts forth from Mendip's hidden reservoirs. This is the source of the Axe, which winds its way through the lower lands, and after uniting with the sister stream of Cheddar, flows into the sea near Weston-super-mare. From Wookey-Hole the southern slope of Mendip rises in an unbroken sweep till it reaches a thousand feet above the sea, commanding a magnificent view to the east, south, and west. It is not a limestone cave in the ordinary sense of the word, since every known cavity in the immediate vicinity is not in the Carboniferous Limestone, but in the Dolomitic Conglomerate, which here attains enormous thickness. To the north, the great mass of Carboniferous Limestone, receiving the water of innumerable springs from the Old Red Sandstone and Shales and from a generous rainfall, engulfs it in a countless number of swallets, many of which are insignificant, whilst some of the larger have been opened by our exploring parties during the past few years, and followed through unimagined beauties to profound depths.


1915 ◽  
Vol 2 (10) ◽  
pp. 447-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Gregory

The relation of the Torridon Sandstone to the Moine Gneiss or ‘Eastern Schists’ is one of the primary questions in thegeology of the Scottish Highlands. These two widespread series ofrocks occur on opposite sides of the great overthrusts in North-Western Scotland; and another remarkable feature of their distributionis that though the Torridon Sandstone often rests directly upon theLewisian Gneiss, it never occurs on the Moine Gneiss. The view hastherefore been suggested that the Moine rocks are the easternmetamorphosed continuation of the Torridonian. Some altered Torridon Sandstones certainly resemble the rocks of the Moine Series.Dr. Home, in his address to the British Association in 1901, quotedthe authority of Dr. Teall and Dr. Peach for the resemblance ofaltered Torridon Sandstone to the Moine; and he again remarked thisresemblance in the memoir on the North-West Highlands. The lateW. Gunn went further, and in the same work claimed (p. 612) that “east of Dundonnell good evidence can be adduced that alteredTorridon Sandstone has entered largely into the composition of the Eastern schists”. The recent memoir on the Fannich Mountains represents some of the flaggy granulites of that district as due “to the crushing of Torridonn grit”.


The deposits of Upper Palæozoic age in the south-west of England differ remarkably in their general characters from those developed on the north side of the Bristol Channel. This conclusion applies not only to the Devonian rocks, but also to the succeeding Carboniferous series. In South Wales and Monmouth, the Devonian beds are of the Old Red Sandstone type, whereas, the Devonian succession of North Devon exhibits a marked, though not an entire change, in both petrological characters and palæontological facies; a change which becomes even more marked in the series of limestones, volcanic, and detrital deposits developed in the southern portion of that county. The South Wales coalfield, the largest and most important productive measures in this country, consists of a sequence of coal-bearing strata, resting upon beds of Lower Carboniferous age, for the most part similar in character to those occurring in our other English coalfields. In Devonshire, and in portions of the neighbouring counties of Somerset and Cornwall, a Carboniferous basin of considerable size is developed, occupying more than 1,200 square miles. In many important respects these rocks again differ somewhat markedly from their equivalents in South Wales. They form a succession of deposits of a somewhat abnormal type; being composed of sediments of extremely varied nature and origin, both detrital and organic. They are especially characterised by a general absence of carbonaceous material of any economic importance. These Carboniferous rocks are spoken of as the Culm Measures, a name first applied to them by Sedgwick and Murchison in 1837. These authors in their classic memoir, published in 1840, gave the first accurate description of the physical structure of the beds, and proved conclusively their Carboniferous age. It may be pointed out, however, that De la Beche, in 1834, was the first to indicate the Upper Carboniferous age of that portion of the Culm Measures which forms the subject of this memoir; his conclusion being based on plant remains identified by Professor Lindley. De la Beche also added considerably to our knowledge of the Culm Measures in his ‘Report on the Geology of Cornwall and Devon,’ published in 1839. Since then, John Phillips, Holl, T. M. Hall, and others, and, in more recent times, Messrs. Hinde and Fox, and Mr. Ussher, have all contributed important information on this subject.


Author(s):  
Daryl A. Cornish ◽  
George L. Smit

Oreochromis mossambicus is currently receiving much attention as a candidater species for aquaculture programs within Southern Africa. This has stimulated interest in its breeding cycle as well as the morphological characteristics of the gonads. Limited information is available on SEM and TEM observations of the male gonads. It is known that the testis of O. mossambicus is a paired, intra-abdominal structure of the lobular type, although further details of its characteristics are not known. Current investigations have shown that spermatids reach full maturity some two months after the female becomes gravid. Throughout the year, the testes contain spermatids at various stages of development although spermiogenesis appears to be maximal during November when spawning occurs. This paper describes the morphological and ultrastructural characteristics of the testes and spermatids.Specimens of this fish were collected at Syferkuil Dam, 8 km north- west of the University of the North over a twelve month period, sacrificed and the testes excised.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roald Amundsen ◽  
Godfred Hansen
Keyword(s):  

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