1-20 OF 1423 RESULTS FOR

northern Pennines

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Published: 17 January 2025
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2024) 65 (1-2): pygs2024-003.
...R. D. A. Smith Detailed stratigraphic sections recorded by the mining industry in Great Britain were first published during the eighteenth century. In the northern Pennines, Forster presented the first representative long composite stratigraphic section in 1809. It encompassed the entire known...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2012
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2012) 59 (2): 133–136.
... to greenish-white crystalline pyromorphite (XRD no. NMW X-2300) and a few crusts of minutely crystalline, bright lime-green pyromorphite, also up to around 2 cm across. Hitherto, coronadite has been reported from only one Northern Pennine locality, at Sedling Mine, Cowshill in Weardale ( Young et al . 1996...
FIGURES
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Reports
Published: 01 January 2011
DOI: 10.1144/SR26.12
EISBN: 9781862396944
... Abstract Carboniferous rocks within the Cumbria and northern Pennines region are bound by the Maryport-Stublick-Ninety Fathom Fault System, which forms the northern boundary of the Lake District and Alston blocks (Fig. 37). In the Pennines, the succession occupies the Alston and Askrigg blocks...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2001
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2001) 53 (3): 207–212.
...K. C. Dunham; B. Young; G. A. L. Johnson; T. C. Colman; R. Fossett SUMMARY The main lead ore mineral within the Northern Pennine carbonate-hosted galena-fluorite orefield is silver-bearing galena. Numerous reliable assay and recovery records, from the heyday of lead mining during the eighteenth...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1997
Journal of the Geological Society (1997) 154 (4): 597–600.
... are compared with new isotopic data from barite mineralization that occurs along the faulted southern margin of the Northumberland-Solway Basin and published data from the Northern Pennine orefield. Similarities betw een the δ 34 S of anhydrite and barites from major mines at Haydon Bridge and the Alston...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1953
Geological Magazine (1953) 90 (2): 127–130.
...M. H. P. Bott; D. Masson-Smith Abstract Gravity measurements in northern England, west of Newcastle, have shown a negative Bouguer anomaly in the upper Weardale area. The preferred explanation is a buried acid intrusion, and deductions growing out of this possibility are presented. GeoRef...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2005
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2005) 55 (4): 241–261.
.... This implies that the total pre-tectonic thickness of the Ingleton Group is likely to have been considerably greater than the 3 km exposed on the common limb in Chapel le Dale. If so, the Ingleton Group must represent a major component of the pre-Windermere Supergroup basement of the northern Pennines...
FIGURES | View All (14)
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2006
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2006) 56 (2): 151–154.
...D. I. Green; B. Young SUMMARY The rare basic hydrated magnesium carbonate minerals hydromagnesite and dypingite are reported from low temperature hydrothermal Pb–Zn deposits in the Alston Block of the Northern Pennine Orefield. Both minerals occur as very late stage constituents of deposits rich...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1996
Mineralogical Magazine (1996) 60 (2): 317–324.
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2008
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology (2008) 41 (3): 315–332.
...L.J. Donnelly Abstract The Pennines form a range of hills in northern England. The elevated parts are known locally as ‘the moors’, and these run from the Scottish border in the north, southwards to the Midlands. The area is dominated by elevated moorland plateaux, which have been incised...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Image
Map of the northern Pennines, indicating borehole and outcrop localities used as part of this study and the data associated with each locality. NCS, Newcastle Science Central Deep Geothermal Borehole. A further list of borehole data used as part of this study is given in Supplementary material Table S3. The locations of seismic lines displayed in Figure 2 are also indicated. Contains BGS DiGmapGB-250 Scale data © UKRI (British Geological Survey 2008) and Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database rights 2022, Ordnance Survey License No. 100021290. Coordinate system is the British National Grid.
Published: 07 February 2022
Fig. 6. Map of the northern Pennines, indicating borehole and outcrop localities used as part of this study and the data associated with each locality. NCS, Newcastle Science Central Deep Geothermal Borehole. A further list of borehole data used as part of this study is given in Supplementary
Image
Geological map of the Alston Block in the Northern Pennines, showing the Cow Green area and positions of other borehole localities mentioned in the text. The figures adjacent to the borehole names are the Whin Sill thicknesses in metres, contrasting with the thickness in the Cow Green region of 72–74 m. The references from which the sill thicknesses are taken are given in the main text. Figure adapted from Kimbell et al. (2010), and reproduced by permission of the Council of the Yorkshire Geological Society.
Published: 01 September 2020
Fig. 1. Geological map of the Alston Block in the Northern Pennines, showing the Cow Green area and positions of other borehole localities mentioned in the text. The figures adjacent to the borehole names are the Whin Sill thicknesses in metres, contrasting with the thickness in the Cow Green
Image
Map of the Alston Block, northern Pennines, showing the limit of the buried Weardale Granite, the region of fluorite mineralization in the overlying limestone, and sample localities (after Bott & Masson Smith 1957).
Published: 22 February 2019
Fig. 1. Map of the Alston Block, northern Pennines, showing the limit of the buried Weardale Granite, the region of fluorite mineralization in the overlying limestone, and sample localities (after Bott & Masson Smith 1957 ).
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2001
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2001) 53 (3): 187–196.
... of this plot. See text for further discussion. Scientific editing by Douglas Holliday 9 10 2000 © Yorkshire Geological Society, 2001 2001 The lead ores of the Alston Block in the North Pennine Orefield, northern England, have been mined since ancient times, and have attracted...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2010
Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society (2010) 58 (2): 107–128.
... a contrast between relatively deep-seated Devonian granites and tabular Ordovician granites in northern England. The most conspicuous magnetic anomalies over the North Pennine batholith are associated with the Early Permian Great Whin Sill, but there is also evidence of magnetized basement rocks or denser...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Image
Uninterpreted and interpreted seismic sections from the northern Pennine Basin, northern England. Seismic reflection profiles are courtesy of the UK Onshore Geophysical Library (UKOGL). (See Fig. 6 for locations.) (a) North–south transect from the Alston Block to the central part of the Northumberland Trough. The Northumberland Trough forms a tilted half-graben, with Carboniferous sediments thickening to the north. (b) East–west transect from the central and granite-cored part of the Alston Block to the Alston Block's eastern margin. Carboniferous sediments are penetrated by deep boreholes and can be seen onlapping against the Alston Block in response to the low-density North Pennine Batholith.
Published: 07 February 2022
Fig. 2. Uninterpreted and interpreted seismic sections from the northern Pennine Basin, northern England. Seismic reflection profiles are courtesy of the UK Onshore Geophysical Library (UKOGL). (See Fig. 6 for locations.) ( a ) North–south transect from the Alston Block to the central part
Image
Geological map of the northern Pennine area. A, Acorn Sike (Polygenetic Conglomerate); D, Dufton Microgranite; GSV, Great Sulphur Vein; HB, Haydon Bridge mining area; PL, Pike Law; RF, Rotherhope Fell; RV, Rookhope Red Vein; SV, Slitt Vein; WV, Hunstanworth White Vein.
Published: 01 November 2010
Fig. 1 Geological map of the northern Pennine area. A, Acorn Sike (Polygenetic Conglomerate); D, Dufton Microgranite; GSV, Great Sulphur Vein; HB, Haydon Bridge mining area; PL, Pike Law; RF, Rotherhope Fell; RV, Rookhope Red Vein; SV, Slitt Vein; WV, Hunstanworth White Vein.
Image
 Map illustrating the northern Pennine Basin, Marsdenian exposure and the localities named in the text. Stratigraphic position of the Marsdenian interval within the Carboniferous period with marine band nomenclature is taken from Riley et al. (1993).
Published: 01 July 2002
Fig. 1.  Map illustrating the northern Pennine Basin, Marsdenian exposure and the localities named in the text. Stratigraphic position of the Marsdenian interval within the Carboniferous period with marine band nomenclature is taken from Riley et al . (1993) .
Image
Mineral deposits of the Northern Pennine Orefield from Dunham (1990) showing sample locations.
Published: 01 May 2001
Fig. 1. Mineral deposits of the Northern Pennine Orefield from Dunham (1990 ) showing sample locations.
Journal Article
Published: 07 February 2022
Journal of the Geological Society (2022) 179 (4): jgs2021-083.
...Fig. 6. Map of the northern Pennines, indicating borehole and outcrop localities used as part of this study and the data associated with each locality. NCS, Newcastle Science Central Deep Geothermal Borehole. A further list of borehole data used as part of this study is given in Supplementary...
FIGURES | View All (14)