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|a 9781402036064
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|a 10.1007/1-4020-3606-X
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|a Pentecost, Allan.
|e author.
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|a Travertine
|h [electronic resource] /
|c by Allan Pentecost.
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|a Dordrecht :
|b Springer Netherlands,
|c 2005.
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|a XIV, 446 p. 204 illus.
|b online resource.
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|a text
|b txt
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|a Origins of the Components -- The Travertine Fabric -- Morphology and Facies -- Limestone Solution, Groundwater and Spring Emergence -- Chemical Composition of Source Waters -- Mineralogy and Elemental Composition -- Stable Isotopes -- Organisms Associated with Travertine -- Deposition Processes -- Travertine Dating -- Palaeobiology and Biostratigraphy of Quaternary Travertines -- Climate, Man and Travertine -- Travertines and Their Fossils: Archaean to Pliocene -- Related Sediments and Industrial Deposits -- Extraterrestrial Travertine -- Utilisation of Travertine.
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|a uring the spring of 1960, an uncle showed me a ‘petrifying spring’ near Plaxtol in Kent Dwhere twigs had been encased in a calcareous jacket. A twig was collected and having - cently been given I. Evan’s Observer’s Book of Geology by my parents, I found a photograph of another petrifying spring and an explanation of its origin. In those days, Derbyshire was too far for a holiday destination, and I took little further interest until a research studentship with Professor G. E. Fogg became available in 1971. Tony Fogg had recently moved to the University College of North Wales, Bangor and the research was to be into cyanobacterium mats, with fieldwork along the Red Sea coast. The fieldwork never materialised but my interest in algal mats had been aroused. A chance stroll along the Bangor shore revealed beautifully calcified cya- bacterium mats, and Tony generously allowed me to investigate these instead. The old Plaxtol collection was retrieved and yielded abundant cyanobacteria. It became apparent that here was a wealth of information about a rock whose formation was so rapid, that the process could be studied in days rather than years – an exceptional state of affairs. A search of the literature also revealed that the rock, a form of travertine, had other unusual features.
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|a Earth sciences.
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|a Geology.
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|a Economic geology.
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|a Sedimentology.
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|a Life sciences.
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|a Aquatic ecology.
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|a Materials science.
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|a Earth Sciences.
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|a Economic Geology.
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|a Geology.
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|a Materials Science, general.
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|a Sedimentology.
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|a Freshwater & Marine Ecology.
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|a Life Sciences, general.
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|a SpringerLink (Online service)
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|t Springer eBooks
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|i Printed edition:
|z 9781402035234
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|u http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3606-X
|z Full Text via HEAL-Link
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|a ZDB-2-EES
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|a Earth and Environmental Science (Springer-11646)
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