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Pliny Range

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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1986
GSA Bulletin (1986) 97 (5): 595–602.
...K. A. RANDALL; K. A. POLAND Abstract The Pliny complex in northern New Hampshire, a part of the White Mountain Magma Series, is composed of eight distinct intrusions. Previous work has indicated chemical variations that cannot be explained by fractional crystallization and has led...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1981
GSA Bulletin (1981) 92 (4): 179–188.
...K. A. FOLAND; M. C. LOISELLE Abstract Recent field work in the Pliny Range of northern New Hampshire established the existence of two syenite units which predate the igneous activity of the White Mountain magma series but postdate the formation of highly foliated units of the Oliverian Jefferson...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2003
Mineralogical Magazine (2003) 67 (2): 363–379.
...A. J. Hall; A. E. Fallick; V. Perdikatsis; E. Photos-Jones Abstract Efflorescences in the geothermal field of SE Melos, Greece, contain significant amounts of hydrated Al sulphate, alunogen, which could represent the Melian alumen exploited in Roman times and commended by Pliny. The efflorescences...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1942
GSA Bulletin (1942) 53 (10): 1533–1568.
...RANDOLPH W. CHAPMAN Abstract The Pliny region, in the northern portion of the Mt. Washington quadrangle, New Hampshire, contains some of the finest examples of ring dikes described in North America. These arcuate bodies intrude older gneiss, quartzite, and quartz diorite, and are, in turn, cut...
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2013
DOI: 10.1144/SP375.14
EISBN: 9781862396432
... BCE), Pliny the Elder’s Historiae Naturae, Dioscorides’ De Materia Medica (first century CE), Isidore of Seville’s Etymologiarum (seventh century) and Alfonso X’s Libro de las Piedras (thirteenth century) all contain frequent references to fossils. In this context, these works might...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2022
Earth Sciences History (2022) 41 (1): 1–15.
... treatments. In the Materia Medica of Dioscorides, such a focus is natural: the minerals are mixed almost indiscriminately with medical plants, vines, and wines in Book 5. But even the wide-ranging Pliny viewed minerals through a medical lens, following most of his mineral descriptions in the Natural...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 01 January 2002
Paleobiology (2002) 28 (1): 1–8.
... for interpreting his cryptic descriptions—ranging from the great Arabic scholar Avicenna in the eleventh century, to Albertus Magnus (the teacher of Thomas Aquinas) in the thirteenth century. Moreover, folk traditions had applied Pliny's names and descriptions to local stones, but perhaps not accurately, therefore...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2007
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2007) 56 (4): 261–265.
... of the Old French jaiet, from the name Gagae, an ancient Greco-Roman town on the coast of south-western Turkey. Diverse properties were attributed to the mineral by ancient writers such as Pliny the Elder, and it is clear that a variety of substances has been described as jet. In the westernmost Taurus...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2023
American Mineralogist (2023) 108 (8): 1483–1494.
... Diamond 16 CE (by Manlius) 4000 BCE Grandfathered, Approved India Jewelry Pyrite 50 CE (by Dioscorides) 7000–5000 BCE (Early Neolithic) Grandfathered, Approved unknown Source of ignition/jewelry Asbestos 60–79 CE (by Pliny the Elder) 2500 BCE Amphibole Group var Finland Ceramics...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2001
Earth Sciences History (2001) 20 (2): 105–126.
... observations with respect. We learn from Pliny in particular that the tides on the coast of Britain are very large, up to “80 cubits” in vertical range, and that the ebb and flood follow the rising and setting of the Moon. Another brief statement, previously included in the Moralia of Plutarch (50–125 C.E...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 2007
Journal of the Geological Society (2007) 164 (6): 1133–1144.
..., North Aegean Thrust; PST, Pliny and Strabo trenches; Sa, Samos; RB, Rhodos basin; Rh, Rhodos; SM, Sea of Marmara; Za, Zakynthos. Previous palaeomagnetic studies have shown that the region mainly underwent counterclockwise rotation during the Neogene. The Bey Dağları region of southwestern Turkey...
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Journal Article
Published: 17 February 2020
Geological Magazine (2020) 157 (4): 695–700.
... Plinian episodes with lulls between (Hildreth & Fierstein, 2012 ). Single eruptive episodes ended with a complete eruptive hiatus, marked by deposition of water-reworked pyroclasts. The climactic phases of the ad 79 Vesuvius eruption are described by Pliny the Younger to the historian Tacitus...
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Journal Article
Journal: SEG Discovery
Published: 01 July 2019
SEG Discovery (2019) (118): 1–15.
... model for porphyry deposits ( Sillitoe, 1973 ). Porphyrites was first described by Pliny as a red rock obtained from Egypt (Pliny, 77, p. 45; Tomkeieff, 1983 , p. 453). The name was derived from the Greek porphyros for Tyrian purple dye. A mottled variety of this rock with white blotches...
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Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 01 January 2002
Paleobiology (2002) 28 (2): 179–183.
..., De re metallica (On metallic objects), by the German natural historian Christopher Encelius. I argued that Encelius introduced the novel practice of drawing specimens in order to bolster his claim for linking this item of his own discovery with one of Pliny's classical names for fossils...
FIGURES
Series: EMU Notes in Mineralogy series
Published: 01 January 2019
DOI: 10.1180/EMU-notes.20.2
EISBN: 9780903056625
... section reviews the information available on use of opals and provenance from historical sources, mainly Pliny the Elder, followed by a short list of ancient and modern opal supply areas, together with a (necessarily incomplete) summary of the geological and geochemical information. The discussion...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2016
Earth Sciences History (2016) 35 (2): 265–282.
... of herbals from the early sixteenth century portrayed plants as drawn from life ( Kaufmann 1999 , p. 406; Osler 2010 , pp. 132–133). 1 Where previous natural histories had relied mostly on verbal descriptions taken from Pliny’s Naturalis Historiae , the natural histories produced during the fifteenth...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 2017
AAPG Bulletin (2017) 101 (4): 617–623.
... of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved. 2017 Spontaneous cold fluid seepages are a renowned phenomenon occurring in a wide range of geologic and geodynamic settings, including deep sea fans, rapidly subsiding basins, and compressive tectonic settings (e.g., Dimitrov, 2002 ; Morley et al., 2011...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2021
Earth Sciences History (2021) 40 (2): 566–580.
... and thaumaturgy powers ( Needham 1986 ). The material most commonly used by the Chinese was nephritic jade in various colors ranging from candid white to yellow, dark grey, greenish yellow, and intense dark green. The greatest and most important deposits of nephrite of the ancient world were situated...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2016
Earth Sciences History (2016) 35 (2): 237–264.
... Empedocles, Theophrastus, Strabo, Ovid, pseudo-Vergil, Seneca Fossils Xenophanes, Xanthus, Herodotus, Eratosthenes, Strabo, Pliny, Pausanius Erosion Xenophanes, Democritus, Aristotle, Stoics, Strabo, Lucretius, Pliny Sedimentation Herodotus, Thucydides, Aristotle, Strato, Strabo, Arrian...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2003
Mineralogical Magazine (2003) 67 (4): 824–825.
...C.J. Hawkesworth © The Mineralogical Society 2003 The Be mineral beryl was known to the ancients, and Pliny the Elder noted that many people considered emerald and beryl to be of the same nature. Of more recent interest is the presence of a cosmogenically produced isotope 10...