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Books > Earth & environment > Earth sciences > Geology & the lithosphere > General
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The Geology of the Country Around Oldham, Including Manchester and Its Suburbs. (Sheet 88 S.W., and the Corresponding Six-inch Maps 88, 89, 96, 97, 104, 105, 111, 112; Lancashire 259, 271) With an Appendix on the Fossils;
(Hardcover)
Edward 1829-1917 Hull, John William 1820-1869 Salter; Created by Museum of Practical Geology (Great Br
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R754
Discovery Miles 7 540
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Isle of Arran dominates the Firth of Clyde. A favourite haunt
of holidaymakers, it is also a place of fascination for the
geologist, offering a huge variety of rocks that represent a
massive slice through geological time. From the ancient bent and
buckled strata of Dalradian - a small fragment of the roots of the
once mighty Scottish Highlands - the dramatic Northern mountains
through which ice gouged its way during the Ice Age, to the
relatively recent (some 60 million years ago!) rocks associated
with the Arran volcano, the geological record tells an amazing
tale. This book is a fascinating introduction to the landscape of
Arran - one of the significant geological areas of the country.
Every rock has a story tell, and none more so than those which have
fallen from the sky: meteorites. Originating in the Asteroid Belt
between Mars and Jupiter, these rocky fragments offer clues not
just to the earliest origins of the Solar System but also to
Earth's very survival into the future. Sky at Night presenter, Dr
Tim Gregory takes us on a journey through the very earliest days of
our Solar System to the spectacular meteorite falls that produced
'fiery rain' in 1792, to the pre-solar grains (literally stardust)
that were blown in from other solar systems and are the oldest
solid objects ever discovered on earth. Meteorites reveal a story
much bigger than ourselves or our planet. As Tim says, 'it is an
epic beyond compare'.
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