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Elements of geology / Charles Lyell.

By: Series: Cambridge library collection. Earth science.Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014Description: 1 online resource (xix, 543 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781107478657 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 551 23
LOC classification:
  • QE26 .L94 2014
Online resources:
Contents:
Part I. 1. Of the four great classes of rocks - the aqueous, volcanic, plutonic, and metamorphic ; 2. Aqueous rocks ; 3. Arrangement of fossils in strata ; 4. Consolidation of strata and petrification of fossils ; 5. Elevation of strata above the sea ; 6. Denudation, and the production of alluvium ; 7. Volcanic rocks ; 8. Volcanic rocks, continued ; 9. Plutonic rocks - granite ; 10. Metamorphic rocks ; 11. Metamorphic rocks, continued -- Part II. 12. On the different ages of the four great classes of rocks ; 13. On the different ages of the aqueous rocks ; 14. Recent and tertiary formations ; 15. Cretaceous group ; 16. Wealden group ; 17. Oolite and lias ; 18. Oolite and lias, continued ; 19. New red sandstone group ; 20. The coal, or carboniferous group ; 21. Carboniferous group, continued, and old red sandstone ; 22. Primary fossiliferous strata ; 23. On the different ages of the volcanic rocks ; 24. On the different ages of the plutonic rocks ; 25. On the different ages of the metamorphic rocks.
Summary: Between 1830 and 1833, Charles Lyell (1797-1875) published his three-volume Principles of Geology, which has also been reissued in this series. The work's renown stems partly from the fact that the young Charles Darwin, on his voyage around the world aboard the Beagle, became influenced by Lyell's ideas relating to gradual change across large spans of time. Shaping the development of scientific enquiry in Britain and beyond, Lyell was determined to disconnect geology from religion. He originally intended some of the present work, first published in 1838, to be a supplement to the Principles, but later expanded it to serve as a general introduction to geology. The topics covered include the formation of various rock types, matters of field geology, and how the presence of marine fossils above sea level could be explained by the land rising, rather than the sea retreating. Many salient points are illustrated with woodcuts.
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Originally published: London : John Murray, 1838.

Part I. 1. Of the four great classes of rocks - the aqueous, volcanic, plutonic, and metamorphic ; 2. Aqueous rocks ; 3. Arrangement of fossils in strata ; 4. Consolidation of strata and petrification of fossils ; 5. Elevation of strata above the sea ; 6. Denudation, and the production of alluvium ; 7. Volcanic rocks ; 8. Volcanic rocks, continued ; 9. Plutonic rocks - granite ; 10. Metamorphic rocks ; 11. Metamorphic rocks, continued -- Part II. 12. On the different ages of the four great classes of rocks ; 13. On the different ages of the aqueous rocks ; 14. Recent and tertiary formations ; 15. Cretaceous group ; 16. Wealden group ; 17. Oolite and lias ; 18. Oolite and lias, continued ; 19. New red sandstone group ; 20. The coal, or carboniferous group ; 21. Carboniferous group, continued, and old red sandstone ; 22. Primary fossiliferous strata ; 23. On the different ages of the volcanic rocks ; 24. On the different ages of the plutonic rocks ; 25. On the different ages of the metamorphic rocks.

Between 1830 and 1833, Charles Lyell (1797-1875) published his three-volume Principles of Geology, which has also been reissued in this series. The work's renown stems partly from the fact that the young Charles Darwin, on his voyage around the world aboard the Beagle, became influenced by Lyell's ideas relating to gradual change across large spans of time. Shaping the development of scientific enquiry in Britain and beyond, Lyell was determined to disconnect geology from religion. He originally intended some of the present work, first published in 1838, to be a supplement to the Principles, but later expanded it to serve as a general introduction to geology. The topics covered include the formation of various rock types, matters of field geology, and how the presence of marine fossils above sea level could be explained by the land rising, rather than the sea retreating. Many salient points are illustrated with woodcuts.

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