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On a Black Sand from South-East Iceland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
So far as the writer is aware, no sodic or “contaminated” rocks have been recorded from Iceland, and it was thought that an examination of some black sand collected by Dr. L. Hawkes, and kindly supplied by him, might reveal the presence of minerals from such rocks.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1927
References
page 542 note 1 Brush, G. J. and Penfield, S. L., Determinative Mineralogy, 16th ed., 1907, p. 127.Google Scholar
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page 543 note 1 Tilley, C. E., “Density, refractivity, and composition relations of some natural glasses”: Min. Mag., vol. xix, pp. 275–94.Google Scholar
page 543 note 2 Made as described in Johannsen, A., Manual of Petrographic Methods, 1918, p. 455, and Journ. of Geol., xxi, 1913, p. 96.Google Scholar
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page 544 note 1 J. W. Judd, op. cit., p. 550, footnote.
page 544 note 2 The greatest source of error. But the figures given express the composition more truly than is possible with the usual method of denoting frequencies by numbers from 1 to 10.
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