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I.—The Antarctic Ice-cap

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

H. T. Ferrar
Affiliation:
Geologist to the late “Discovery” Antarctic Expedition, of the Survey Department, Cairo.

Extract

In a recent number of the Geological Magazine, Dec. V, Vol. III, March, 1906, p. 120, there is an article by Prof. E. H. L. Schwarz which deals with the thickness of ice-caps during the various Glacial periods. At the outset Professor Schwarz takes the data furnished by Captain Scott's narrative of the voyage of the “Discovery” as the main support of the physicists' contention that an ice-sheet cannot exceed 1,600 feet in thickness.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1906

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References

page 529 note 1 Russell, H. C.: Journal of the Royal Society of New South Wales, vol. xxxi (1897), p. 241, reference number 172.Google Scholar

page 529 note 2 Nansen, : Nature, vol. lvii (1898), p. 424.Google Scholar

page 529 note 3 Drygalski: Greenland Expedition, p. 33.

page 529 note 4 Scott, : Geog. Journ., April, 1905, p. 360.Google Scholar

page 530 note 1 Rink, : Danish Greenland, London, 1877, p. 358.Google Scholar

page 530 note 2 Scott, : Geog. Journ., April, 1905, p. 356.Google Scholar

page 531 note 1 Schwarz, : Geol. Mag., Dec. V, Vol. III, March, 1906, p. 122.Google Scholar

page 532 note 1 All the temperatures quoted are our unconnected values. Reference should be made to the “Discovery” Reports on Geology and Meterology, which are to be published by the British Museum (Natural History) and the Meteorological Office respectively.

page 532 note 2 Tyndall, : “Heat a Mode of Motion,” 1898, 11th edition, p. 231 ff.;Google Scholar “The Forms of Water,” 1892, 11th edition, p. 154.Google Scholar

page 533 note 1 Buchan: “Challenger” Reports, Physics and Chemistry, plates.

page 533 note 2 Garwood: Q.J.G.S., vol. lviii, pl. xl.