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Breccias.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
Breccias in general have been exhaustively discussed by W. H. Norton, and Bonney has fully described a large number of sedimentary origin. But since these papers were written attention has been drawn to certain fresh types of brecciated rock, and perhaps a briefer account than that in Norton's paper and one referring more particularly to British examples may be of service.
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References
1 Journ. of Geology (Chicago), xxv (1917), pp. 160–94.Google Scholar
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12 Trans. Geol. Soc. Glasgow, xvi (1916), pp. 75–85. This paper, which is illustrated by four plates, gives references to all earlier British writers and summarizes their opinions. There is also a reference to these breccias in Norton's paper (op. cit., p. 171). He suggests that they may be due to landslides fallen into the sea.Google Scholar
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2 Note—In addition to the numerous cases alluded to in the text rocks brecciated by movement are shown in several of the plates in the North- West Highland memoir. P1. xxii is of a dyke shattered by movement but with the fragments still in contact. Pl. xxix is of phacoidal structure produced in a gneiss. Compare also Hill, J. B., “On the Crust Conglomerates of Argyllshire,” Q.J.G.S., lvii (1901), pp. 313–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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