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Edinburgh Rock Brian Upton

Edinburgh Rock By Brian Upton

Edinburgh Rock by Brian Upton


£25.00
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Edinburghs rocks afford startling perspectives of the extraordinarily different environments of their formation. Sandstones were washed down in rivers meandering through a tropical landscape while the more famous landmarks are memorials to volcanoes that erupted about 340 million years ago.

Edinburgh Rock Summary

Edinburgh Rock: The Geology of Lothian by Brian Upton

Looking at Edinburgh Castle it is easily appreciated that it embodies a thousand year's worth of history. By investigation of soils and erosional features we can extend Edinburgh's history back to the end of the ice-ages and the movements of glaciers across the region can also be discerned. However, before the ice-ages we are confronted with a vast time gap of around three hundred million years. For this interval we can only surmise what local conditions in and around Edinburgh were like. It is when we investigate the bed-rocks that it is possible to take the story back further. Edinburgh's rocks, formed between 300 and 450 million years ago, afford startling perspectives of the extraordinarily different environments of those remote times. The sandstones with which much of the city is built, were washed down in rivers meandering through a tropical landscape. Coals from the seams of the Midlothian coal-field are fossil relicts of extensive rain-forests that thrived in steamy coastal swamps. The more visible rocks such as the famous Castle Rock, are memorials to volcanoes that erupted about 340 million years ago. Older than these, and dating back to more than 400 million years, are the Braid, Blackford and much of the Pentland Hills. Whilst the oldest rocks within a 25 mile radius of Waverley Bridge are tucked away in a few small patches of the Pentland hills. More than two hundred years of geological researches have left us with a remarkably detailed picture of the distribution of land and sea, of the climate and of the evolving plants and animals that lived here. 'Edinburgh Rock' is an account of these fascinating Palaeozoic times by Brian Upton and Euan Clarkson.

Edinburgh Rock Reviews

'this is an excellent book; it is authoritative yet entertaining and a thoroughly good read... the authors have taken their description of Edinburgh Rock as a starting point and created a text that is somehow more than the sum of the parts.' Geological Magazine
'Beautifully produced, lovely to hold and read... an excellent book for all geologists.' The Geoscientist

About Brian Upton

Brian Upton is a retired professor of petrology and Euan Clarkson is a retired professor of palaeontology. The two have worked as close colleagues in the University of Edinburgh for the past forty years.

Table of Contents

List of Tables and Illustrations. Preface. 1: Introduction; 2. The rocks and geological structures of the Edinburgh district; 3. Plants and vertebrates of the Palaeozoic; 4. Ordovician and Siluriann of the Southern Uplands; 5. Silurian of the Pentland Hills; 6. Sedimentary Rocks of the 'Old Red Sandstone' continent: the Lower Devonian; 7. Edinburgh's volcanoes in Old Red Sandstone times; 8. Upper Devonian to Lower Carboniferous; 9. Early Carboniferous environments; 10. A sub-tropical Edinburgh of lagoons and volcanoes; 11. Volcanoes of East Lothian; 12. Edinburgh's Carboniferous lake district; 13. Return of the sea; 14. Coal and the Coal Measures; 15. Magmatic intrusions of the late Carboniferous; 16. Edinburgh: the missing years; 17. The Pleistocene Ice Ages and their legacy; 18. The building stones of Edinburgh; 19. Epilogue. Select Bibliography. Index of Place Names. Index of Geologists.

Additional information

GOR004940597
9781903765395
1903765390
Edinburgh Rock: The Geology of Lothian by Brian Upton
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Liverpool University Press
2006-06-29
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Edinburgh Rock