000 02018nam a2200277Ia 4500
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020 _a9780412758607
040 _cIISER BPR
041 _aEng
082 _a552.3
_bPIT
_223rd
100 _aPitcher, Wallace Spencer
245 4 _aThe nature and origin of granite
250 _a2nd ed.
260 _aLondon:
_bChapman & Hall,
_cc1997.
300 _axvi, 387p. :
_bill, hb. ;
_c21cm
520 _aThe origin of granite has for long fascinated geologists though serious debate on the topic may be said to date from a famous meeting of the Geological Society of France in 1847. My own introduction to the subject began exactly one hundred years later when, in an interview with ProfesĀ­ sor H. H. Read, I entered his study as an amateur fossil collector and left it as a committed granite petrologist - after just ten minutes! I can hardly aspire to convert my reader in so dramatic a way, yet this book is an attempt, however inadequate, to pass on the enthusiasm that I inherited, and which has been reinforced by innumerable discussions on the outcrop with granitologists of many nationalities and of many shades of opinion. Since the 1960s, interest in granites has been greatly stimulated by the thesis that granites image their source rocks in the inaccessible deep crust, and that their diversity is the result of varying global tectonic context. So great a body of new data and new ideas has accumulated that my attempt to review the whole field of granite studies must carry with it a possible charge of arrogance, especially as I have adopted the teaching device of presenting the material from a personal point of view with its thinly disguised prejudices. Includes illustrations, figures, tables, references, bibliography and index.
650 _aEarth Sciences
650 _aPetrology
650 _aGranite
942 _cBK
_2ddc
942 _2ddc
947 _a13778.081400000001
948 _a22
999 _c3355
_d3355