CARBONIFEROUS ROCKS OF THE CONCHE – GROAIS ISLAND AREA, NEWFOUNDLAND

1966 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Baird

About 5 000 ft of Carboniferous sedimentary strata occur in the Cape Rouge and Conche peninsulas, small projections on the east side of the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland. The lower 900 ft of the section consists of coarse conglomerate and sandstone, the fragments in which were derived from nearby older rocks. These lower beds are overlain by about 4 000 ft of shale and sandstone, in places petroliferous and with bituminous residues, and bearing plants and spores identified as of upper Horton (late Tournaisian) age. The sedimentary rocks described in this paper are the northernmost known Carboniferous rocks of the Appalachian belt. They lie in a basin between Groais Island and the Great Northern Peninsula and may possibly be continuous under the sea with the Grand Lake–White Bay basin a 100 mi to the southwest. The boundary fault on the west side of this Carboniferous basin is a portion of a fault system which is known to extend some 300 mi from the northern tip of Newfoundland to its southwest corner and is a portion of the Cabot fault of Wilson. Movement on the fault system appears to have been of at least three ages, pre-Horton (pre-Tournaisian), post-Horton–pre-Windsor (post-Tournaisian–pre-Visean), and post-early Pennsylvanian (post-Westphalian "A").

2011 ◽  
Vol 149 (4) ◽  
pp. 578-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. YOUNG ◽  
W. G. E. CALDWELL

AbstractTwo strikingly different successions of Lower Carboniferous (mainly Tournaisian) sedimentary rocks are closely juxtaposed on the NE coast of the island of Arran, SW Scotland. Near the village of Corrie a thin succession (~ 17 m) of Tournaisian rocks is preserved, whereas in the neighbouring Fallen Rocks–Laggan area, correlative rocks are > 300 m in thickness. These contrasting successions are separated by the Laggan Fault, which is a landward extension of the submarine Brodick Bay Fault, marking the SW boundary of the Northeast Arran Trough. The contrasting thickness and stratigraphy of the two sequences of sedimentary rocks result from juxtaposition of shoulder and trough deposits along the Laggan–Brodick Bay Fault. Although originally a normal, basin-defining fault, later sinistral movements caused significant displacement of the NE Arran Trough, together with a segment of the Highland Boundary Fault, from their original positions. The most northerly occurrence of the Highland Boundary Fault on Arran is thought to be the truncated northern end of the Corloch Fault. To the SW the surface trace of the Highland Boundary Fault is largely obscured by a Palaeogene granite body but it is present on the west side of the island, near Dougrie. The Highland Boundary Fault appears to be displaced to the south, in Kilbrannan Sound, by a series of NW-trending sinistral transcurrent faults. Thus the ‘anomalous’ trend of the Highland Boundary Fault and narrowing of the Midland Valley of Scotland in the Firth of Clyde area may be explained by later fault movements and intrusion of the Palaeogene North Arran Granite Pluton.


1978 ◽  
Vol 20 (84) ◽  
pp. 547-553 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald D. Osborn

AbstractUnusually strong till fabrics in lateral moraines of Bethartoli Glacier provide information on the genesis and growth of the moraines. On the west side of the valley, down-stream of the present glacier snout, several lateral moraine crests are juxtaposed. Because the crests generally become higher towards the valley axis, they must represent re-advances of the glacier rather than recessional stages. On the east side of the valley only a single lateral ridge is found; presumably the ridge is composed of debris from several glacial advances. On the eroded proximal flank of this ridge a strong fabric is visible; the plane defined by a- and b-axes of stones is parallel to the distal flank of the moraine ridge, indicating that the moraine grew mainly by accretion of debris on to its distal flank. On the eroded proximal flank of the innermost west-side ridge the equivalent fabric is weaker, suggesting that distal flank accretion was less significant and proximal flank accretion more significant than on the east side.


1957 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 321-325
Author(s):  
C. A. Whitten

abstract Resurveys made after the 1954 earthquake in the Dixie Valley Area determined the horizontal and vertical displacements which occurred. Triangulation stations on the west side of the fault moved north approximately 4 feet, and points on the east side moved south by a similar amount. Releveling showed a drop and also a tilt of a valley floor.


2000 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 633-647 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Preston ◽  
J. A. Trofymow

Limitation of tree growth due to inadequate P supply has been found for young plantations following harvesting of old-growth in high rainfall areas of coastal British Columbia. To understand the reasons for P limitation, we investigated P chemistry in mineral soil to 50 cm depth in sites from the Coastal Forest Chronosequence project on Vancouver Island. This allowed comparison of biogeoclimatic subzone (higher rainfall on west than east coast sites) and of time from harvesting disturbance (seral stage). Available (Bray 1) P was significantly higher (P < 0.001) on the drier east side (up to 50 mg kg−1), than on the west side (<5 mg kg−1), although total P values were less divergent (694 mg kg−1, east and 534 mg kg−1, west). There were no significant seral stage effects on total and available P. Extraction with 0.5 M NaOH recovered 50–60% of total P, except for samples from 10–30 cm depth on the west side, for which only 20% was recovered, an effect not found for C. Analysis of the NaOH extracts by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy showed much higher proportions of orthophosphate P on the east side. West side extracts were higher in organic P forms, especially diesters, typical of forest ecosystems with restricted nutrient cycling and high precipitation. On the west side, low concentrations of available P, higher proportions of organic P in NaOH extracts, and depression of NaOH extractability at 10–30 cm are consistent with P being a limiting nutrient for tree growth, a problem that may be exacerbated by harvesting disturbance. Key words: Forest chronosequences, harvesting disturbance, 31P NMR, P cycling, organic P


1869 ◽  
Vol 6 (62) ◽  
pp. 347-348
Author(s):  
H. C. Sorby

For a considerable time I have taken much interest in the question of the origin of the narrow and deep valleys in the Carboni-ferous Limestone district of Derbyshire, and have carefully recorded whatever seemed to explain their formation. So far I have never met with more striking facts than those to be seen in Deep Dale, about three miles in a direct line E.S.E. from Buxton. I estimate the depth of the valley at about 100 feet, and its width at from 100 to 200 yards. At a distance of about a mile from the Bakewell road there is a cavern, which is especially conspicuous on the east side. Its entrance is about 6 feet high, 20 feet broad, and 40 feet above the bottom of the valley. It extends nearly horizontally for about 30 yards, and then descends to a lower level, where I did not further examine it. On looking from the entrance to the opposite side of the dale I was surprised to see what appears to be a continuation of the same cavern. The entrance on that side is at about 80 feet above the valley, and is so much blocked up with detritus that one can only examine it for a space of 10 yards. Taking, however, all the facts into consideration, it appears to me that at a very remote period a subterranean stream flowed continuously along these two caverns, from west to east. There is abundance of suitable gather ground on the west side which even now has no well-marked surface drainage, and from which much of the water probably escapes by a subterranean course, ending in the large spring in the main valley, by the road-side below Kingsterndale.


1925 ◽  
Vol 62 (5) ◽  
pp. 223-223
Author(s):  
M. P. Latter

Within the last 50 years the lower reaches of the Teifi from St. Dogmells to Cardigan Bar have undergone a complete change: the bed of the river formerly lay near the west side of the estuary as far as the Webley Arms, and this point in the river was then known as Pwll Cam (“the crooked pool”), as it was here that the river took a sharp bend describing an ogee curve by way of the spit to the east of the present sandbanks: this old river channel lay in clay, unlike the present shallow river bed on the east side of the estuary, and quite big vessels could float even at low tide in front of the Webley Arms, which is now a low stretch of mud banks covered at high tide. A wreck, which laid up over two or three tides, was the simple means of effecting this change in the river's course. Since then it has led to other comparatively rapid geological changes: the Manian-fâch stream, which has its source in the Pant-y-Groes plateau, used to flow almost direct into the Teifi, when in its old course; now, however, since the bed of the Teifi, on leaving the Battery Point, crosses over to the east side of the estuary, the whole of the estuary to the west has been silted up with sand and mud, and this has been accelerated by the formation of sand-banks right across the mouth of the bay: consequently the Manian-fâch stream, on emerging off the mainland, is now deflected to the S.E. and flows for about a mile approximately parallel to the main river, though in the opposite direction, before joining it nearby the Battery Point. The watershed of the roughly triangular strip of sand flats, seen at low tide, lies very close to the present river bed, so that practically all the water off this area at low tide drains first into the Manian-fâch, and thus describes nearly a complete circle twice daily. This instance is analogous to, but not quite homologous with, that of the Eiver Aide in Suffolk, the original mouth of which has been deflected more than 12 miles south by currents from the north.


ASTONJADRO ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 107
Author(s):  
Dwi Sulastri ◽  
Atik Wahyuni ◽  
Sri Wiwoho Mudjanarko

<pre>Gubeng Station is the most populous station of 52 stations that enter the work area of PT KAI </pre><pre>Daop 8 Surabaya, with 978,346 train passengers in January 2019, where this number is the highest number </pre><pre>of train passengers for 3 years recorded at Gubeng station. Gubeng Station is also very unique, </pre><pre>because it is located at a height of 5 meters and has two functionally different sides. The west side </pre><pre>building is used for the departure and arrival of economy and express trains, while the east side </pre><pre>building is for the departure and arrival of business and executive trains. This functional difference </pre><pre>needs to be a study of the provision of infrastructure/facilities available at the Gubeng station </pre><pre>whether it meets the minimum train service standards and has provided services/satisfaction and the </pre><pre>importance of the existing facilities at the Gubeng station according to the train user perception. </pre><pre>The method used is importance performance analysis (IPA) and the conclusion is that satisfaction </pre><pre>and importance of the existing facilities at Gubeng station according to the train user perception obtained </pre><pre>a satisfaction value of 2.48 which means that they still do not get maximum service and the average </pre><pre>value of interest is 4.57 which means that the existing facilities at Gubeng station are needed by train </pre><pre>passengers.</pre><pre> </pre>


2020 ◽  
pp. 250-260
Author(s):  
Earl J. Hess

Both sides faced an enormous task in caring for the wounded resulting from the failed attack of May 22. The Federals suffered 3,199 losses that day, 2,550 of them were wounded. While John C. Pemberton’s Confederates suffered only about 500 losses all told, they had fewer resources to care for their wounded than the Federals. Even so, many Union surgeons and their staff were burdened for days in caring for so many wounded men in temporary field hospitals behind the Federal line. Those able to do so were moved to the landing on the east side of the Yazoo River north of Vicksburg to board hospital boats for transfer north to general hospitals at Memphis and other Federally-controlled cities along the Western river system. To the extent possible, squads of soldiers retrieved wounded as well as abandoned arms and other equipment from no-man’s-land between the lines. The few prisoners taken by the Confederates, amounting to 147 Federals, were soon released by Pemberton so he would not have to feed them. They signed paroles and then were transported across the Mississippi River and delivered to Federal troops on the west side of the stream.


The Coronation geosyncline developed in the early Proterozoic along the western margin of a continental platform (the Slave Province) of Archaean rocks older than 2300 Ma, and culminated between 1725 and 1855 Ma ago with the emplacement of a pair of batholiths (the Bear Province). The evolution of the geosyncline has a strong family resemblance to Phanerozoic geosynclines believed to delineate ancient continental margins and have been controlled by global plate interactions. Such geosynclines are unknown in Archaean orogenic belts, from which it is inferred that creation of the first large rigid continental platforms marked the end of the Archaean and the beginnings of actualistic plate tectonics. The geosyncline began with deposition of a westward-facing continental shelf, consisting of a lower formation dominated by orthoquartzite, derived from the platform, and an upper cyclic stromatolitic dolomite formation. West of the shelf edge, the dolomite passes abruptly into a much thinner mudstone sequence with dolomite debris-flows, and the orthoquartzite into a thick laminated silt and mudstone sequence with quartzite turbidites. The oldest rocks west of the shelf edge, an area interpreted to have been a continental rise, are pillow basalts and volcanic breccias, extruded above a basement of unknown character. The principal turning point in the evolution of the geosyncline came with the foundering of the continental shelf. It is draped by a thin laminated pyritic black mudstone sequence, overlain by a westward-thickening clastic wedge resulting from intrusion and erosion of the batholiths to the west. The clastic wedge begins with a thick sequence of coarse greywacke turbidites that passes eastward into concretionary mudstone on the platform. The mudstone grades upward into laminated shaly limestone with minor greywacke turbidites, overlain in turn by cross-bedded red lithic sandstone. The supracrustal rocks of the geosyncline have been compressed and tectonically transported toward the platform. Adjacent to the batholithic belt, the continental rise and clastic wedge sequences are penetratively deformed and recrystallized by regional low-pressure metamorphism. To the east, the unmetamorphosed continental shelf and clastic wedge sequences have been flexurally folded and overthrust above a basal detachment surface. East of the thrust zone, relatively thin rocks on the platform are nearly flat-lying except around large anticlinal basement uplifts. Unusual features of the platform are its two aulacogens - long-lived deeply subsiding fault troughs that extend at high angles from the geosyncline far into the interior of the platform. During every phase in the evolution of the geosyncline, the aulacogens received much thicker sedimentary sequences, commonly with the addition of basaltic volcanics, than adjacent parts of the platform. Although equal in thickness to the geosyncline, the aulacogens were never subjected to the batholithic intrusions, regional metamorphism or low-angle overthrusting characteristic of the geosyncline. The Athapuscow aulacogen, in the region of Great Slave Lake, is interpreted as having been an incipient rift, located over a crustal arch, during the continental shelf stage of the geosyncline, but sagged to become a crustal downwarp during the clastic wedge stage, ultimately with sufficient transverse compression to produce broad folds. Finally, the aulacogen became part of a regional transcurrent fault system, along which thick fanglomerates accumulated in local troughs. The batholithic belt consists of two batholiths, eroded to different depths, separated by the northtrending 350 km long Wopmay River fault. The Hepburn batholith, east of the fault, is a composite intrusion of mesozonal granodiorite plutons. The foliated and migmatitic borders of the plutons are normally concordant with wall rock sheaths of sillimanitic paragneiss. Along the eastern margin of the batholith, metamorphosed rocks of the continental rise sequence dip gently to the west beneath the batholithic rocks. Belts of intensely deformed and metamorphosed supracrustal rocks within the batholithic terrain include sequences of pillow basalt, pelites and granite-pebble conglomerate, perhaps the lower part of the continental rise deposited during the initial rifting of the continental margin. The Great Bear batholith, west of the fault, consists of discordant epizonal plutons, mostly adamellite, that intrude broadly folded but regionally unmetamorphosed sequences of welded rhyodacitic ash-flow tuff, trachybasalt and derived sedimentary rocks. The volcanic rocks, intruded by dense dyke swarms radiating from the plutons and by felsite plugs, are interpreted to be comagmatic with the plutons. Mapping is as yet insufficient to establish, speculations aside, the possible relations of the two batholiths to arc-trench systems. Furthermore, the western margin of the batholithic belt, a region of critical importance, is covered by a veneer of younger Proterozoic and Paleozoic sedimentary rocks. Until fossil arc-trench systems are outlined, the contention that the Coronation Geosyncline involved global plate interactions is based on indirect evidence - the analogous evolution of the geosyncline east of the batholithic belt with Phanerozoic geosynclines in which fossil arc-trench systems have been found.


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