Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
In bringing the last of a long series of papers on the Surface Drifts of the Lake District of Cumberland and Westmoreland to a close, Mr. Mackintosh sums up the general results at which he has arrived. All will agree with the first of his conclusions, “that land-ice may have planed, smoothed, polished, and striated rock surfaces, and pushed loose débris forward….” But I cannot see his reason for adding, “to the nearest protected situations,” for one would expect to find a terminal moraine at the open entrance of a valley, on a plain, or even on what can be proved to have been a true sea-bottom.
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page 413 note 2 Idem, “On the Two Glaciations, etc.”
page 413 note 3 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., and “On the Valley of the English Channel,” vol. vi., 1850, p. 69.Google Scholar
page 413 note 4 The “littoral zone” of Forbes and Andouin, and the “marginal zone” of Godwin-Austen.
page 414 note 1 “Origin of Species,” 5th ed., pp. 358–9.Google Scholar
page 414 note 2 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxvii.Google Scholar
page 415 note 1 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxvii., “On the Glacial Phenomena, etc.’Google Scholar
page 416 note 1 For my descriptions of this clay in North Wales, see Nature, vol. ii., p. 391;Google Scholar in Lancashire, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxvii.Google Scholar; Geol. Mag., Vol. VIII., pp. 108, 116, and 310.Google Scholar
page 416 note 2 Quart. Journ, Geol. Soc., vol. xxvii., part i., p. 652.Google Scholar
page 417 note 1 Quart. Journ Geol. Soc. vol. xxvii., part i.Google Scholar
page 417 note 2 Geol. Mag. Vol. VI.Google Scholar