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قراءة كتاب The Geological Story of the Isle of Wight

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The Geological Story of the Isle of Wight

The Geological Story of the Isle of Wight

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Transcriber's Notes

With the exception of the changes noted below, the text in this file is the same as that in the original printed version. These may include alternate spelling from what may be common today (for example, gneisse); punctuation and/or grammatical nuances. There are numerous instances of words appearing as hyphenated versions and without a hyphen (e.g., north-west and north west, south-east and south east, etc.). Additionally, several missing periods were inserted; but are not listed below. Lastly, the Index seems to be missing a few references to page numbers and were left as originally printed.


Typographical Corrections
Page 69: regious => regions
Page 101: sourrounding => surrounding
Page 102: remains In the peat => ... in ...
Page 106: surounding => surrounding

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE GEOLOGICAL STORY OF

 

THE ISLE OF WIGHT.

 

 

[Frontispiece]

 

Gore Cliff

Photo by J. Milman Brown, Shanklin. Gore Cliff—Upper Greensand with Chert Beds

 

 

The Geological Story
of the
Isle of Wight




BY THE
Rev. J. CECIL HUGHES, B.A.



With Illustrations of Fossils by

MAUD NEAL




LONDON:



EDWARD STANFORD, LIMITED
12, 13, & 14 LONG ACRE, W.C. 2.
1922

 

 

 

 

PREFACE

No better district could be chosen to begin the study of Geology than the Isle of Wight. The splendid coast sections all round its shores, the variety of strata within so small an area, the great interest of those strata, the white chalk cliffs and the coloured sands, the abundant and interesting fossils to be found in the rocks, awaken in numbers of those who live in the Island, or visit its shores, a desire to know something of the story written in the rocks. The Isle of Wight is classic ground of Geology. From the early days of the science it has been made famous by the work of great students of Nature, such as Mantell, Buckland, Fitton, Sedgwick, Owen, Edward Forbes, and others, who have carried on the study up to the present day. Many of the strata are known to geologists everywhere as typical; several bear the names of the Island localities, where they occur; some—and those not the least interesting—are not found beyond the limits of the Island. Though studied for so many years, there is no exhausting their interest: new discoveries are constantly made, and new questions arise for solution. To those who have become interested in the rocks of the Island, and the fossils they have found in them, and who wish to learn how to read the story they tell, and to know something of that story, this book is addressed. It is intended to be an introduction to the science of Geology, based on the Geology of the Isle of Wight, yet leading on to some glimpse of the history presented to us, when we take a wider outlook still, and try to trace the whole wondrous path of change from the world's beginning to the present day.

I wish to express my warmest thanks to Miss Maud Neal for the beautiful drawings of fossils which illustrate the book, and to Professor Grenville A. J. Cole, F.R.S., for his kindness in reading the manuscript, and for valuable suggestions received from him. I have also to acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. H. J. Osborne White's new edition of the Memoir of the Geological Survey of the Isle of Wight, 1921; and to thank Mr. J. Milman Brown, of Shanklin, for the three photographs of Island scenery, showing features of marked geological interest, and Mr. C. E. Gilchrist, Librarian of the Sandown Free Library, for kindly reading the proofs of the book.

J. CECIL HUGHES.


Mar., 1922.

 

 

CONTENTS
Chap. Page
I. The Rocks and Their Story 1
II. The Structure of the Island 10
III. The Wealden Strata: The Land of the Iguanodon 15
IV. The Lower Greensand 23
V. Brook and Atherfield 29
VI. The Gault and Upper Greensand 37
VII. The Chalk 42
VIII. The Tertiary Era: The

Pages