The structural and stratigraphic complexities of Coast Range geology have been dwelt upon by many writers. Whenever some bold spirit has proposed a classification designed to bring them into some sort of order, his contemporaries have generally remained unconvinced. Perhaps the best-known hypotheses of recent years have been based on the tacit assumption that no sort of regularity exists and hence that no real classification is possible. There is certainly something to be said for this view, as is sufficiently attested by the fact that a great deal has been said for it. If I have sometimes argued in the...
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