Palaeomagnetism of the Exeter Lavas, Devonshire
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Palaeomagnetism of the Upper Miocene- Lower Pliocene lavas from the East Carpathians: contribution to the paleosecular variation of geomagnetic field.
Investigations of the paleosecular variation of the geomagnetic field on geological timescales depend on globally distributed data sets from lava flows. We report new paleomagnetic results from lava flows of the East Carpathian Mountains (23.6°E, 46.4°N) erupted between 4 and 6 Ma. The average virtual geomagnetic pole position (76 sites) includes the North Geographic Pole and the dispersion of ...
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According to the Statistical Account of Scotland (Maconochie, 1792) the village of Leadhills in Lanarkshire contains the most famous and ancient lead mines in Scotland. They were included in a grant of lands to the monks of Newbattle Abbey in 1239 and, from a lawsuit soon afterwards, it is clear that the mines were in production about that date. Depending on demand and the price of lead they ha...
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JAMES HARDY figures little in most reports of the Devonshire Colic. Instead, authors have concentrated mainly on the role of Sir George Baker in the discovery of the cause of the disease. 6, 18, 19, 28. 29 The work of Baker is undoubtedly of the first importance when considering the history of the Devonshire Colic and his essays published in 1767 and 1768, 3, 4 discussing the results of his exp...
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We reanalyse the cell theory of Lennard-Jones and Devonshire and find that in addition to the critical point originally reported for the 12−6 potential (and widely quoted in standard textbooks), the model exhibits a further critical point. We show that the latter is actually a more appropriate candidate for liquid-gas criticality than the original critical point. Typeset using REVTEX
متن کاملSir George Baker and the Devonshire Colic
JOHN P1mLIPS was not a Devon man and the colic which he described with such evident personal feeling was not the Devonshire colic. In the eighteenth century the cider making counties of England were the shires of Devon, Hereford and Gloucester. Cider was being made in Devonshire in the thirteenth century. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, when Defoe visited the county he remarked on t...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Geophysical Journal International
سال: 1967
ISSN: 0956-540X,1365-246X
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-246x.1967.tb03114.x