INTERPRETATION OF VITRINITE REFLECTANCE PROFILES IN THE CENTRAL IRISH SEA AREA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE TIMING OF ORGANIC MATURATION

Author(s):  
D. Corcoran* and G. Clayton*
Author(s):  
R.P. Briggs ◽  
R.J.A. Atkinson ◽  
M. McAliskey ◽  
A. Rogerson

Histriobdella homari is a polychaete annelid belonging to the Order Eunicida and Family Histriobdellidae. Histriobdella homari is normally found in the gill chambers or among the eggs of the lobster Homarus vulgaris from the English Channel (Roscoff) and in the southwestern part of the North Sea (George & Hartmann-Schroder, 1985). Two independent sightings of H. homari living on the pleopods of Nephrops norvegicus from the Irish Sea and Clyde Sea area are reported.


2020 ◽  
pp. 87-98
Author(s):  
Caroline Paterson ◽  
Craig Stanford
Keyword(s):  

1971 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 501-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Baker

SummaryThe deep-seated caledonoid lineaments which developed in conjunction with the L. Palaeozoic basins in Wales, S. Irish Sea and Co. Wexford, bounded elongated fault-blocks within the resistant basement and its cover; it is suggested that under compression these broke internally along contemporary, strike-slip cross-faults. In the Central Wales and N. Wales–SE Co.Wexford blocks the latter were principally E–W and N–S faults respectively. Repeated movements of diverse styles along members of all three suites have influenced sedimentalogic, volcanic, plutonic and geomorphologic events throughout the Phanerozoic; in particular, they permitted the Irish Sea Geanticline to rise above the roots of the Monian tectogene, and determined the form of the younger Irish Sea sedimentary basins.


Nature ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 238 (5359) ◽  
pp. 101-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. J. PERKINS ◽  
J. R. S. GILCHRIST ◽  
O. J. ABBOTT
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
A. C. Taylor ◽  
T. J. Venn

A number of studies exist on the seasonal cycles of body weight and tissue biochemistry of several species of bivalve from the Clyde Sea area (Ansell & Trevallion, 1967; Ansell, 1974, et seq), including two members of the Pectinidae, namely Chlamys septemradiata (Müller) (Ansell, 1974) and Pecten maximus L. (Comely, 1974). Some comparative data are available for Chlamys opercularis (L.) from Manx waters (Soemodihardjo, 1974) and for P. maximus from the north Irish Sea (Stanley, 1967).


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