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III.—Secular Straining of the Earth in Relation to the deep Phenomena of Volcanic Action
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
The application by Dr. Johnston-Lavis of the theory of the secular straining of the Earth, with which my name and Mr. Davison's is connected, to an explanation of the deeper phenomena of volcanic action, is ingenious and suggestive. It will, therefore, I trust, be of some use if I am allowed to discuss and criticize the principles and propositions that appear to me to be necessarily involved in the views put forth by Dr. Johnston-Lavis. Before doing this, I feel it incumbent upon me to point out that Mr. O. Fisher's position with regard to the question seems to have been misunderstood. So far from occupying an antagonistic position, he has done much to mathematically develop the theory; and it is only when we come to its practical application to the explanation of geological phenomena, that he, myself and Mr. Davison differ.
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References
page 344 note 5 Geol. Mag. June, 1890.
page 345 note 1 Origin of Mountain Ranges, chap. xi.
page 345 note 2 Physics of the Earth's Crust, second edition, p. 106.
page 345 note 3 Origin of Mountain Ranges, p. 125.
page 346 note 1 See note by me appended to the paper by the Rev. F. Grensted entitled “Theory of the Airless and Waterless Condition of the Moon,” Proceedings of the Liverpool Geol. Soc. Session 1887–8.