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Walton

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Journal Article
Journal: Geophysics
Published: 15 February 2017
Geophysics (2017) 82 (2): Y1.
Journal Article
Journal: Geophysics
Published: 29 October 2013
Geophysics (2013) 78 (6): D545–D556.
... are often required. In pursuit of this goal, fractional changes in elastic moduli have been related to fractional changes in stress through a perturbation analysis of the extended Walton model. The stress path considered was composed of isotropic loading followed by an arbitrary stress perturbation...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1999
AAPG Bulletin (1999) 83 (5): 815–816.
...Richard H. Vaughan Abstract Paul Walton died on July 27, 1998 in Salt Lake City of a neurological disease at the age of 84. Paul's career was a true larger-than-life geologist's success story--a wildcatter whose geological talent, keen powers of observation, natural curiosity, and indomitable...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1998
Geological Magazine (1998) 135 (6): 803–817.
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 October 1998
Economic Geology (1998) 93 (6): 834–844.
...Martine M. Savard; D. F. Sangster; Martin D. Burtt Abstract Although sideritized limestone of the Macumber Formation hosts the Ba (Cu, Pb, Zn, Ag) Walton deposit of Nova Scotia, siderite is an uncommon gangue mineral of carbonate-hosted base metal deposits. This paper evaluates whether the abundant...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 October 1998
Economic Geology (1998) 93 (6): 845–868.
...Daniel J. Kontak; D. F. Sangster Abstract The Walton Ba-Pb-Zn-Cu-Ag deposit, with a historical (1941-1978) production of 4.4 Mt of barite and 0.36 Mt of massive sulfide ore, is hosted by sideritized, Visean carbonates of the Macumber Formation which forms the basal member of the marine Windsor...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 October 1998
Economic Geology (1998) 93 (6): 869–882.
...D. F. Sangster; M. D. Burtt; D. J. Kontak Abstract The Walton Ba-Cu-Pb-Zn-Ag deposit, Nova Scotia (production 4.5 million metric tons (Mt) >90% BaSO 4 and 412,850 t0.52% Cu, 4.28% Pb, 1.29% Zn, and 350 g/t Ag), is hosted by Visean age carbonate rocks of the Macumber Formation and its associated...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1993
Journal of the Geological Society (1993) 150 (2): 277–292.
...R. N. THOMPSON; S. A. GIBSON; P. T. LEAT; J. G. MITCHELL; M. A. MORRISON; G. L. HENDRY; A. P. DICKIN Abstract The Walton Peak lavas erupted directly onto c. 1.8 Ga basement and were interbedded with subaerial sediments. Four new K-Ar dates for the lavas average 22.8 ± 0.3 Ma, associating them...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1989
Journal of the Geological Society (1989) 146 (5): 743–745.
...C. O. HUNT Abstract The basal sands of the Red Crag Formation at Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, contain a pollen assemblage dominated by Pinus and with pollen of Taxodiaceae and thermophilous trees. This is comparable with assemblages from the Dutch Reuverian ‘ C’ (Late Pliocene). It is not closely...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 December 1986
Economic Geology (1986) 81 (8): 2016–2021.
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 July 1976
Economic Geology (1976) 71 (4): 749–762.
...R. W. Boyle; R. K. Wanless; R. D. Stevens Abstract The consolidated rocks underlying the Walton-Cheverie area are mainly sediments of Lower Carboniferous (Mississippian) and Triassic age. Diabase sills, probably of Triassic age, occur in one place. The Mississippian rocks consist of a lower series...
Journal Article
Published: 01 July 1971
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology (1971) 4 (3): 249.
... Abstract The working Party are grateful to Messrs. Franklin, Broch & Walton for their comments. We would disagree with the use of a system of strength classification based on equal divisions because it would tend to create unusually large units in the strength scale within areas where...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1965
The Canadian Mineralogist (1965) 8 (2): 166–171.
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1974
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology (1974) 7 (1): 101–102.
...K. R. Early; A. W. Skempton 1974 The Geological Society, London In their pertinent account of the Walton's Wood slide the Authors show that slip surfaces have probably been subject to subsequent chemical reduction at some period during the time interval, Late-Glacial to Present...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1972
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology (1972) 5 (1-2): 19–41.
...Kenneth Reginald Early, B.SC., A.R.S.M., F.G.S.; Alec Westley Skempton, D.SC., F.I.C.E., F.R.S., F.G.S. Summary Field and laboratory investigations of the Walton's Wood landslide led, for the first time, to the determination of the residual strength of a clay by (1) tests on natural slip surfaces...
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2014
DOI: 10.1144/SP378.25
EISBN: 9781862396623
Image
Simplified geologic map of the northeastern Adirondack Mountains (Walton and De Waard, 1963; Fisher et al., 1970; Dicken et al., 2008). The squares represent iron mines and prospects (U.S. Geological Survey, 2015). The black polygon represents the bounds of the airborne surveys. The upper left inset shows the map location within New York state (orange box) and the elevation.
Published: 22 January 2021
Figure 1. Simplified geologic map of the northeastern Adirondack Mountains ( Walton and De Waard, 1963 ; Fisher et al., 1970 ; Dicken et al., 2008 ). The squares represent iron mines and prospects ( U.S. Geological Survey, 2015 ). The black polygon represents the bounds of the airborne surveys
Image
Outcrop at Walton-on-the-Naze, showing surfaces arising from erosion and stasis and estimated duration of formation. Approximate minimum time to deposit complete package of sediment within the field of view was c. 53 days (1264 h of deposition and stasis, plus unknown time lost to erosion). Order of events: 1, Dp1 (60 h, including multiple instances of instantaneous stasis); 2, Es1 (unknown missing time); 3, Dp2 (uncertain, but possibly within one tidal reversal; see ripple lamination at base (i.e. 6 h)); 4, Dp3 (95 h, including multiple instants of instantaneous stasis plus Ss1–9 (1 h each)); 5, Es2 (unknown missing time); 6, Dp4 (16 h including multiple instants of instantaneous stasis); 7, Es3/Ss10 (uncertain order as not clear if burrows truncated or not; uncertain missing time; 509 h of stasis); 8, Dp5 (not estimated, limited architectural evidence); 9, Ss11 (288 h); 10, Dp6 (290 h including Ss12–19 (1 h each)). Durations of stasis surfaces (Ss) and depositional packages (Dp) are gauged as follows (unburrowed foresets are not numbered, and are assumed to represent instantaneous stasis time intervals at minimum). Time is estimated only for those packages fully exposed in the cliff face (i.e. no consideration is given to strata at the top or bottom of the outcrop where exposure is obscured or truncated and elapsed time cannot be confidently estimated). Ss1–9: Skolithos burrows: maximum dimensions: approximate volume 1.5 cm3 (maximum length 8 cm, maximum width 0.5 cm); excavation time 1 h (possible polychaete tracemaker, maximum burrowing rate of 0.5 cm3 h−1). Ss10: Psilonichnus burrows: maximum dimensions: approximate volume 2545 cm3 (maximum length 40 cm, maximum width 9 cm); excavation time 509 h (probably crustacean tracemaker, maximum burrowing rate uncertain, but maximum rate of organisms in Table 1, 5 cm3 h−1, used). Ss11: Cylindrichnus burrows: maximum dimensions: approximate volume 144 cm3 (maximum length 15 cm, maximum width 2.5 cm); excavation time 288 h (possible polychaete tracemaker, maximum burrowing rate of 0.5 cm3 h−1). Ss12–19: Skolithos burrows: maximum dimensions: approximate volume 1.5 cm3 (maximum length 8 cm, maximum width 0.5 cm); excavation time 1 h (possible polychaete tracemaker, maximum burrowing rate of 0.5 cm3 h−1). Dp1: minimum sand wave height 70 cm; lateral extent 380 cm; time to migrate (at 70 cm per 12 h) 60 h. Dp2: no clear stasis surfaces, but direction of ripple laminae suggests a flow reversal, possibly placing this within one 6 h tidal reversal. Dp3: minimum sand wave height 60 cm; lateral extent 430 cm; time to migrate (at 60 cm per 12 h) 86 h. Dp4: minimum sand wave height 60 cm; lateral extent 82 cm; time to migrate (at 60 cm per 12 h) 16 h. Dp6: minimum sand wave height 20 cm; lateral extent 470 cm; time to migrate 282 h.
Published: 14 August 2019
Fig. 11. Outcrop at Walton-on-the-Naze, showing surfaces arising from erosion and stasis and estimated duration of formation. Approximate minimum time to deposit complete package of sediment within the field of view was c. 53 days (1264 h of deposition and stasis, plus unknown time lost
Image
The EMT moduli (Walton infinite friction model) are amended by applying the pressure-dependent relaxation correction. We apply different relaxation corrections, depending on the BC. The corrected moduli better match lab data, especially for the shear modulus; SS1 and SS2 are explained in Figure 6 caption.
Published: 12 September 2016
Figure 10. The EMT moduli (Walton infinite friction model) are amended by applying the pressure-dependent relaxation correction. We apply different relaxation corrections, depending on the BC. The corrected moduli better match lab data, especially for the shear modulus; SS1 and SS2 are explained
Image
The EMT (Walton infinite friction model) predicts higher shear modulus than GD simulation and laboratory results for glass beads. We use porosity-CN-pressure relations from GD to estimate EMT moduli; SS1 and SS2 are explained in Figure 6 caption.
Published: 12 September 2016
Figure 8. The EMT (Walton infinite friction model) predicts higher shear modulus than GD simulation and laboratory results for glass beads. We use porosity-CN-pressure relations from GD to estimate EMT moduli; SS1 and SS2 are explained in Figure  6 caption.