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TECTONlCS AND PHYSICS Geology, although rooted in the laws of
physics, rarely has been taught in a manner designed to stress the
relations between the laws and theorems of physics and the
postulates of geology. The same is true of geophysics, whose
specialties (seismology, gravimetIy, magnetics, magnetotellurics)
deal only with the laws that govern them, and not with those that
govern geology's postulates. The branch of geology and geophysics
called tectonophysics is not a formalized discipline or
subdiscipline, and, therefore, has no formal laws or theorems of
its own. Although many recent books claim to be textbooks in
tectonophysics, they are not; they are books designed to explain
one hypothesis, just as the present book is designed to explain one
hypothesis. The textbook that comes closest to being a textbook of
tectonophysics is Peter 1. Wyllie's (1971) book, The Dynamic Earth.
Teachers, students, and practitioners of geology since the very
beginning of earth science teaching have avoided the development of
a rigorous (but not rigid) scientific approach to tectonics,
largely because we earth scientists have not fully understood the
origin of the features with which we are dealing. This fact is not
at all surprising when one considers that the database for
hypotheses and theories of tectonics, particularly before 1960, has
been limited to a small part of the exposed land area on the
Earth's surface."
all such systems are important, the Proterozoic column This volume
concerns the geology of China, and it examinesthat concern by
expositionsofthe stratigraphy, possibly is unique in its continuous
sedimentary devel the paleogeography, and the tectonics ofthat
remarkable opment and in its reference section of global rank. In
paleogeography, this volume describes and illustra country. In this
sense, therefore, our aims and purposes are explicit in the title.
The senior author and his tes first the broad distribution of
Proterozoic deposits. colleagues, furthermore, do not have in mind
any special Succeeding descriptions and illustrations trace the ebb
and flow of shallow marine waters across China as or specific
audience. This volume is quite simply for all geologists. By far
the majority will be those whose Phanerozoic time of more than 600
million years elapses native tongue is English, or those who
understand from the beginning of the Cambrian to the present. In
structure, this volume emphasizes the importance English. Not to be
overlooked, moreover, is the large number ofChinese geologists who
not only read English of paraplatforms, platforms, geosynclines,
and great but also who themselves write studies in English that
east-west zones of fracture in the Precambian, also the appear in
publications in both their homeland and effects of these early
structural elements on structure abroad. in the ensuing
Phanerozoic. In the Phanerozoic itself, north-south stress
developed in the pre-Phanerozoic A constantly growing interest in
the geology of China continued through much of the Paleozoic."
TECTONlCS AND PHYSICS Geology, although rooted in the laws of
physics, rarely has been taught in a manner designed to stress the
relations between the laws and theorems of physics and the
postulates of geology. The same is true of geophysics, whose
specialties (seismology, gravimetIy, magnetics, magnetotellurics)
deal only with the laws that govern them, and not with those that
govern geology's postulates. The branch of geology and geophysics
called tectonophysics is not a formalized discipline or
subdiscipline, and, therefore, has no formal laws or theorems of
its own. Although many recent books claim to be textbooks in
tectonophysics, they are not; they are books designed to explain
one hypothesis, just as the present book is designed to explain one
hypothesis. The textbook that comes closest to being a textbook of
tectonophysics is Peter 1. Wyllie's (1971) book, The Dynamic Earth.
Teachers, students, and practitioners of geology since the very
beginning of earth science teaching have avoided the development of
a rigorous (but not rigid) scientific approach to tectonics,
largely because we earth scientists have not fully understood the
origin of the features with which we are dealing. This fact is not
at all surprising when one considers that the database for
hypotheses and theories of tectonics, particularly before 1960, has
been limited to a small part of the exposed land area on the
Earth's surface.
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