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I.—The Carrara Marbles. A Chapter in the History of Continental Geology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

G. A. Lebour
Affiliation:
London and Belgium, Lecturer in Geological Surveying in the University of Durham College of Physical Science, Newcastle-on-Tyne.

Extract

The celebrated statuary marbles of Carrara, which have of late I years been universally described as of Jurassic age, have quite recently been shown conclusively to belong to the Carboniferous series, and the steps which have led to the discovery form an instructive illustration of the difficulties which beset Alpine Geology. No one has a better right to relate the history of the classification of the rocks of the Apuan Alps than M. Coquand, and this he is now doing in a series of papers published in the Bulletin of the Geological Society of France. From the first of these we arrive at the following résumé of the various opinions which have been held-from time to time regarding the age of the statuary marbles.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1876

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References

page 289 note 1 Coquand, H., “Histoire des Terrains stratifiés de l'ltalie centrale se référant aux périodes primaire, paléozoïque, triasique, rhétienne et jurassique,” Bull. Soc. Géologique de France, 3e sér. tom. iii. p. 27 (1875).Google Scholar

page 289 note 2 In a paper published in the “Nuovo Giornale dei Litterati,” t. xxvii. (1833 ?).

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page 292 note 1 For Messrs. Garrigou and Leymerie's spirited controversy, see Comptes Rendus. t. lxxviii. p. 1629, t. lxxix. pp. 53, 145, and 328.Google Scholar