Pyroxenes, amphibole, and mica from the Tiree marble

Author(s):  
A. F. Hallimond

The Tiree pink marble, a fine-grained, severely crushed limestone with evidence of earlier coarse crystallization, is exposed in several small areas up to 100 feet across on the farm of Balephetrish near the north coast of the island of Tiree in the Hebrides. It contains a remarkable quantity of dark silicate minerals and has discordant contacts with the adjacent Lewisian gneiss. The precise nature of its relation to the gneiss, and mode of emplacement, have been much discussed. The writer has been permitted to consult accounts of the literature, by Mr. V. A. Eyles, and of the petrography, by Sir Edward B. Bailey, and is also indebted to those authors for discussion of the problems. At the suggestion of Sir Edward Bailey the present work was undertaken as a contribution to the study of this problem from the mineralogical point of view. Most of the determinations were made in 1938, but it was not possible to complete publication at that time.

The stage which the question of the function of the pelvic filaments of the male Lepidosiren had reached before the researches described in this paper can be seen by reference to the paper by Carter and Beadle (1930) and that by Cunningham in the previous year. The researches of Carter and Beadle as well as those previously carried out by Graham Kerr were made in the Gran Chaco of Paraguay, in the swamps of which region Lepidosiren is rather abundant. But when direct experiments on the function of the filaments were contemplated the political conditions made it inadvisable to attempt to visit this region, and it was suggested that Lepidosiren would be found in sufficient abundance on the island of Marajó at the mouth of the River Amazon. No evidence was obtained that the fish had recently been taken in that island, but three specimens, all from the same locality, namely a “papyrus meadow” near Fazenda Dunas on the north coast of the island, were recorded in 1896 and 1898 by Dr. Goeldi, Director and founder of the Muséu Goeldi at Belem. It was therefore decided to organise and carry out an expedition to Marajó. The equipment was prepared in the Physiological Department of the London Hospital Medical College and consisted of large glass tubes from 18 inches to 30 inches in length and 1½ inches to 3 inches in diameter; and weighed quantities in hermetically sealed tubes or bottles of the reagents required for the estimation of dissolved oxygen in water, together with the necessary accessories, and a special pump for obtaining water from below the surface of swamp pools.


1965 ◽  
Vol 5 (40) ◽  
pp. 399-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. C. Arnold

Abstract Meighen Island lies in the centre of the north coast of the Queen Elizabeth Islands and fronts on the Arctic Ocean. An ice cap of about 76 km.2 covers about one-tenth of the island. Its greatest thickness of 150 m. occurs under the summit, near the south end, which was 268 m. above sea-level in 1960. The northern half of the ice cap is less than 30 m. thick; and the total volume is of the order of 2,000 × 106 m.3. Precipitation is low in the northern Queen Elizabeth Islands, and Meighen Island lies in an area where summer temperatures are lowest. In the winters of 1959–60, 1960–61 and 1961–62, the snow accumulation was 12.6, 18.2 and 14.1 cm. of water equivalent. Some snowfall remained on the higher part of the ice cap in the cold summer of 1961; but the ice cap diminished in volume in each year; by 36 × 106, 72 × 106, 22 × 106 and 91 × 106 m.3 in the 1959, 1960, 1961 and 1962 ablation seasons. If the conditions of these four seasons were maintained the ice cap would disappear in about 100 yr. However, a radio-carbon dating of a saxifrage exposed by the retreat of the ice from a small nunatak near the northern edge gave a date of less than 100 yr., and it appears that the existence of the ice cap might be sensitively related to recent climatic change. Careful surveys were made in 1959, 1960 and 1961 in an attempt to detect movement in the ice cap. Unequivocal evidence is not available from these surveys; but the stake network has been maintained and another survey has recently been completed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1-2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Verma ◽  
Javid Iqbal Mir ◽  
Shiv Lal ◽  
Tanushree Sahoo

Globally India is the second largest producer of fruits; however the productivity is significantly low as compared to advanced countries. The majority of the temperate fruits and nuts are being cultivated in the north-western Himalayan and small areas are lies in north eastern parts. High altitude and temperate regions are capable to produce good quality fruits. But the foothill where the chilling is insufficient adversely affects the yield and quality. In India, majority of the temperate fruits were introduced from other parts of the world and some are indigenous to India like walnuts and wild apple species. Therefore, the improvement of the temperate fruits and nuts were taken place mainly through introduction of promising cultivars. The exotic cultivars are still the backbone of fruit production in India particularly for apple, pear, peach, plum and cherry. Promising varieties were introduced from USA, UK, Germany, Italy, France, Australia, New Zealand, Hungary and Bulgaria and were evaluated for commercial exploitation. However, in walnutand almonds, production is mainly from Indigenous cultivars/ local land races. These consisted of non-descriptive trees and highly variable in yield and quality traits. Recently, several varieties have been developed in India in apple, peach, plum, apricot, cherry and walnut. The potential of these varieties are immense for commercial exploitation. The paper attempt to document the accomplishment made in temperate fruit and nut improvement in perspective to Indian Scenario. The information is valuable for breeders and academician for further studies.


Parasitology ◽  
1912 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 190-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert Henry

The haemogregarine which is the subject of the present communication was obtained in material collected by me during two voyages made in a trawler in July 1910, round the Shetlands and the north coast of Scotland. It was found in large adult specimens of catfish (Anarrhichas lupus), taken by otter trawl from a depth of 50 to 80 fathoms, in the vicinity of Fair Isle and Foula, and on Whitenhead Bank about nine miles to the N.N.E. of Cape Wrath. Catfish taken near Rhona and Sulisker in the Atlantic showed no infection, but the number of fish examined was so small that one could not assume the infection to be absent in this locality.


1913 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 334-336
Author(s):  
Edwin L. Arnold

The pygmy and small implements shown to-night from Cornwall were found on the landward slope of Trevose Head, near Padstow, on the north coast of the county. The sea end of this promontory rises to some 200 feet, and thence the ground inclines rapidly back to the mainland, the connecting neck being not more than half a mile wide. At the narrowest part the rain-water, constantly filtering through the adjacent peat, wastes down the hard bedrock of slate, comes out as a small spring, which, in the course of ages, has cut a channel of a hundred yards in length to the cliff edge. At the springhead stands a cairn of a massive block of white quartz, obviously of great age, but whether coeval with the prehistoric settlpment it would be impossible to say. This cairn or beacon would be seen from a long way over the adjacent bay, and might have served to guide seafarers of any age to the fresh-water supply. Here, amongst the faint traces of trenching and hut circles, the small implements, and chips made in their manufacture, all of snow-white patina, were lying about in great profusion.


1838 ◽  
Vol 128 ◽  
pp. 343-349

It was the object in the experiments recorded in this paper, to determine the relative magnetic forces soliciting both the dipping, and horizontal needles, by observing the times of their completing a given number of vibrations at the various places visited during a period of three years, on the North American and West India Station, in Her Majesty’s Ship Racehorse. The dipping instrument used was one of modern construction by Dollond. Each observation for the dip consisted of an equal number of readings of the positions of the needle, with the face of the instrument east and west, before and after the inversion of the poles, and a mean of all the readings taken for the true dip. The instrument had two needles fitted to it, one of which being used solely for the purpose of observing its vibrations, its magnetism was therefore never interfered with, and this needle in this paper is distinguished by the letter B. The other needle was kept for the purpose of determining the dip, and the results obtained with it are given in Table I.


Poverty is a global problem, often linked to needs, difficulties and shortcomings in many circumstances. Some people may understand this term subjective and comparative, while others see it in terms of moral and evaluative, and others understand it from a scientific point of view [1-4]. This poverty problem always accompanies the development process undertaken by each country. Poverty is a major problem facing developing countries including Indonesia. As a multi dimensional social phenomenon, poverty not only deals with economic dimensions but also deals with structural, psychological, cultural, ecological and other factors. The number of poor people is likely to increase, and it is undeniable that most victims of poverty are women and children [5-8]. There are still many women experiencing discrimination in various aspects of social, cultural as well as economic. Village women are particularly vulnerable Women need to be involved in planning, implementing activities, and evaluating and analyzing the impact of development. Nevertheless, the symptoms of poverty still show a real figure [6-10]. Regency, Subang, Indramayu and Cirebon are the North Coast Area of West Java where coastal areas tend to be higher poverty level [11-15].


1962 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 1-251
Author(s):  
H Sørensen

The rare mineral steenstrupine was first described from pegmatoid veins in the Ilímaussaq alkaline massif, South Greenland. It is now known to be of wide-spread occurrence in this massif, being present in agpaitic rocks (naujaite, sodalite foyaite and lujavrite) and in late veins of hydrothermal affinity. In the present paper three small areas within the Ilímaussaq massif have been selected for a rather detailed study of the mode of occurrence of the steenstrupine, namely the small island of Qeqertaussaq made up of naujaite which is cut by very thin veins of a black, lujavrite-like rock, felted ægirine and albite-analcime-natrolite rocks; the head of Kangerdluarssuk with thicker veins of black lujavrite and green ægirine felt cutting the naujaite; and the north coast of Tunugdliarfik which represents a deeper level in the intrusion, being composed of lujavrite with numerous inc1usions of naujaite. The naujaite of the last-named area is cut by thin veins of ægirine felt, acmite, albite and analcime-natrolite. The lujavrite here has apparently assimilated naujaitic material. Steenstrupine occurs in these three areas in lujavrite, late veins and in the naujaite adjacent to these rocks. It is also present in albite-analcime-natrolite· bearing replacement bodies in some zoned naujaite pegmatites. Some features favour a metasomatic origin of the lujavrite, but it is conc1uded that the combined observations are best explained by a magmatic interpretation. The lujavrite is clearly later than the naujaite, its intrusion being guided by the joints of the naujaite. Considerable tilting and rotation of the naujaite inclusions in lujavrite is seen in places. In some lujavrite veins it is seen that the mise en place of the lujavrite was preceded by the formation of ægirine felt along the naujaite joints. The intrusion of the lujavrite was accompanied and succeeded by the formation of thin veins containing one or more of the minerals acmite, arfvedsonite, albite, analcime and natrolite. In the lujavrite a very pure maximum microc1ine and a pure low albite have been formed in equilibrium indicating a low temperature of formation, probably of the order of 400 oC. The albite and in cases also the microc1ine, nepheline and sodalite of the lujavrite, may be replaced, to varying extent, by analcime, and, more rarely, by natrolite. This also favours a low temperature of formation of the lujavrite. At these low temperatures and in this very sodium-rich environment liquid immiscibility may have played a role as is mentioned in the discussion of peculiar spheroidal structures in the lujavrite. Some of the analcime of the lujavrite may be a primary precipitate of the lujavrite magma, but most analcime is probably secondary after the primary alkali· aluminium silicates. This analcitization is considered to be late magmatic. The sodium-water-rich rest liquid of the lujavrite may be squeezed out and has affected analcitization of the naujaite inclusions. These late fluids are also responsible for the formation of the late veins made up of albite, analcime, natrolite and a number of rare minerals containing rare earths, Nb, Th, Mn, Li, P, F, Zn and S. These elements are partly expelled from the lujavrite magma, partly leached out of the naujaite adjacent to the fractures by the percolating late fluids. The fact that the rare minerals (e.g. steenstrupine, britholite, monazite, lepidolite, schizolite, igdloite and sphalerite) of the late veins also occur in the analcitized lujavrite indicates that the formation of these minerals was closely connected with the later stages of crystallization of the lujavrite. The lujavrite and naujaite are rich in eudialyte; this mineral is rare in the steenstrupine-bearing rocks. It is therefore concluded that the eudialyte is stable at a higher temperature than the steenstrupine, monazite, etc. The steenstrupine-bearing replacement bodies of the naujaite pegmatites were formed simultaneously with the late veins and are thus considerably later than the naujaite and clearly formed from fluids of external origin, with respect to the primary pegmatite system. This feature is compared with the well-known replacement bodies in granite pegmatites. The chemical and physical properties of the late fluids and the mechanisms of transport and precipitation of the rare elements are discussed. New chemical analyses of ægirine, acmite, beryllium sodalite, chkalovite and igdloite and a number of partial chemical analyses of albite, analcime, microcline, monazite, natrolite, nepheline and sodalite are reported. Point countings have been made on the finer grained, more homogeneous rocks. The minerals of the rocks are briefly described, and a number of rare rock types are described and discussed.


1999 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 337-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frances M. Hayashida

According to historical sources, the Inka relocated groups of craft specialists to provincial centers to manufacture goods for the state. Recent fieldwork in the Leche Valley on the north coast of Peru provides insights into the organization and technology of pottery production at these centers. While Inka style jars were added to their repertories, potters continued to manufacture vessels in local styles using local techniques. These results caution against a reliance on style in identifying products made in administered contexts, and question the equivalence of style with polity in the Inka provinces. They also highlight a need to critically evaluate Inka cultural policies and the significance of subject styles in the empire.


1900 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 436-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Busz

Last year, while on an excursion to Scotland, I visited the Ardnamurchan peninsula, which, as is well known, consists to a great extent of rocks belonging to the gabbro family. On the road leading from the little village of Kilhoan, opposite the Isle of Mull, on the north coast, a small quarry has been opened for road-metal, which shows an exquisite section of a granophyre dyke intrusive in a dark and almost black fine-grained rock, which the microscopic examination proved to be a gabbro. This is, therefore, a similar occurrence to that of Barnavave, Carlingford, Ireland, which has been admirably described by Professor Sollas, and also that of Strath in the Isle of Skye, of which Mr. Harker has given us a detailed account. As occurrences of this kind seem to be rather rare and, as far as I am aware, hitherto not known from Ardnamurchan, I may be excused for calling your attention to the following short description of these rocks, although there is but little to be added to the results attained by the skilful researches of the above-mentioned authors, and it only shows again that on Ardnamurchan we are to expect very nearly the same geological phenomena as in the adjacent islands, in particular in Skye and Rum.


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