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The Blea Wyke Beds and the Dogger at Peak, Yorkshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

In our earlier paper on the Petrography of the Blea Wyke Series (1) we stated our intention of describing the Blea Wyke Beds as developed alongside the Peak Fault, or as near to it as possible. This section has never been described, while the brief references to it in the Geological Survey Memoirs (2, 3) are not altogether correct. Here it is stated that “all the beds become thinner in the steep cliffs to the northwards of Blea Wyke, so that below Peak Hall, where they are again accessible, there are not more than 15 feet of the ‘Grey Beds’ and 20 feet of the ‘Yellow Beds’”.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1939

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References

LIST OF REFERENCES

(1) Rastall, R. H., and Hemingway, J. E., The Petrography of the Blea Wyke Series, Geol. Mag., LXXII, 1935, 125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(2) Fox-Strangways, C., The Jurassic Rocks of Britain, i, Mem. Geol. Survey, 1892.Google Scholar
(3) Fox-Strangways, C., and Barrow, G., The Geology of Whitby and Scarborough, Mem. Geol. Survey, 1915.Google Scholar
(4) Richardson, L., The Lower Oolitic Rocks of Yorkshire, Proc. Yorks. Geol. Soc., xvii, 1911, 184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(5) Wright, T., On the Subdivisions of the Inferior Oolite of the South of England compared with equivalent beds of that formation of the Yorkshire Coast, Quart. Jour. Geol. Soc., xvi, 1860, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar