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This Volcanic Isle - The Violent Processes that forged the British Landscape (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R485
Discovery Miles 4 850
You Save: R82
(14%)
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This Volcanic Isle - The Violent Processes that forged the British Landscape (Hardcover)
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Was R567
Loot Price R485
Discovery Miles 4 850
You Save R82 (14%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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From the natural geometry of the Giant's Causeway to the sarsen
slabs used to build Stonehenge, we are surrounded by evidence for
the extraordinary geological forces that shaped the British Isles.
Running coast to coast through Devon is 'Sticklepath', Britain's
'San Andreas', a geological fault with the two sides displaced
horizontally by several kilometres, all within the recent
geological past. The Sticklepath Fault is just one manifestation of
the rich tectonic history of the British region since the asteroid
collision that ended the reign of the dinosaurs, 66 million years
ago. Raised out of the Chalk Sea, the original Albion was a thickly
forested island a thousand kilometres long, surrounded by chalk
cliffs, punctuated with great volcanoes, and the site of two trial
'spreading ridge' plate-boundaries. As the volcanoes shifted west,
and Greenland separated from Europe, the wind-blown volcanic ash
laid the strata on which London was founded. The vertical Needles,
known to every Isle of Wight sailor, are part of the northern
foothills of the Pyrenees. When the collision subsided, rifting
created a garland of Celtic lakes from Brittany to the Outer
Hebrides. In This Volcanic Isle Robert Muir-Wood explores the rich
geological history of the British Isles, and its resulting legacy.
Along the way he introduces the personalities who shared a
fascination for Britain's tectonic history, including Charles
Darwin the geologist, Tennyson the science-poet, and Benoit
Mandelbrot, the pure mathematician who labelled the west coast of
Britain a fractal icon. Here is the previously untold story of how
earthquakes and eruptions, plumes and plate boundaries, built the
British Isles.
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