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Aspects of the geology and geochemistry of the proterozoic rocks of the Valley of a Thousand Hills, KwaZulu-Natal.Milne, George Charles. January 1999 (has links)
A regional field and geochemical study has allowed the identification of three primary units within the
Proterozoic basement of the Valley of a Thousand Hills. The Nagle Dam Formation incorporates several
chemically distinct orthogneiss series, characterised by limited intragroup fractionation, and derived from
discrete sources. Intrusive into the gneisses are the megacrystic A-type granites of the Mgeni batholith,
comprising the biotite granites of the Ximba Suite; the hornblende granites and charnockite of the
Mlahlanja Suite; and the medium grained leucogranite of the Nqwadolo Suite. Petrogenetic modelling
indicates that these are predominately cumulates. A general model for the A-type granites suggests that
they were derived through variable MASH processes on an original within plate type basalt. Enclaves
within the Mgeni batholith form a distinct series, the Valley Trust Formation, comprising a nongenetic
orthogneiss association of amphibolite and crustal sourced quartzo-feldspathic gneiss and locally derived
paragneisses. Interaction between the biotite granite and the pelitic enclaves generated a biotite garnet
granite. Geothermobarometry suggests temperatures of metamorphism to a maximum of 770°c for the
Nagle Dam Formation and c.850°C at a pressure of 6 kb for the Valley Trust Formation. Potential
magmatic temperatures of c.760°C at 5 kb are derived for the Mgeni batholith. High Mn garnets within
late veins indicate subsequent intrusion at higher levels.
Derivation of a tectonic model for the Valley of a Thousand Hills is assisted by a revaluation of the
chemical tectonic discrimination plots as source or initiator discriminators. These indicate an origin for
the Nagle Dam Formation in an arc environment, while the bimodal orthogneiss association of the Valley
Trust Formation and the A-type character of the Mgeni batholith suggests their evolution during
extensional events. Geothermobarometry defines an isothermal decompression path, possibly generated
during a collision event, superimposed on which is a potential midcrustal heating event, resultant on the
intrusion of the Mgeni batholith. These data can be integrated with revised lithotectonic data from the
southern portion of the Natal Province to derive a regional model. This comprises: the collision of a
number of arcs with associated splitting to form backarcs, sedimentation, and failed rift systems;
syn-collisional S-type magmatism, contemporaneous with isothermal decompression of the region; and a
series of pulses of post-orogenic granites. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1999.
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Microstructural and Chemical Study of Borosilicate Minerals in Pegmatites from the Larsemann Hills, Prydz Bay, East AntarcticaWadoski, Eva R. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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A Follow-Up Study of the Graduates of Ottawa Hills High School, 1941-1950Allion, Allen L. January 1954 (has links)
No description available.
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A Follow-Up Study of the Graduates of Ottawa Hills High School, 1941-1950Allion, Allen L. January 1954 (has links)
No description available.
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Perinatal calf mortality in the Kansas Flint HillsCain, Donald Verne. January 1985 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1985 C34 / Master of Science
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The Geology and Mineralization of the Sedimentary Hills Area, Pima County, ArizonaBennett, Paul J. January 1957 (has links)
Mildly metamorphosed Cretaceous siltstones, arkoses and limey shales and a small composite stock of granitic composition are the principal rocks exposed in the Sedimentary Hills area, which lies six miles west of Tucson, Arizona. About 2400 feet of sediments were measured and assigned to the Amole Arkose Formation. The beds dip to the south and strike northwesterly. The stock is composed of two granitic facies. The northern and earlier part of the stock is a quartz monzonite which is mildly altered. The southern part of the intrusive is a granite porphyry which is altered to a greater degree and exhibits significant disseminations of chalcopyrite and pyrite. A quartz-pegmatite plug, probably a late phase of the intrusions, intrudes the quartz monzonite. Structure in the area is dominated by a large thrust zone which strikes generally parallel to the bedding. Within the Sedimentary Hills area, normal faulting and drag folding are tributary to the thrusting. Minor copper oxide minerals are frequent along large and small faults, and in the granite porphyry stock. Wide brick-red and brown gossans occur along the major thrust plane.
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An application of remote sensing to terrain and vegetation analysis in the Caribou Hills, N.W.T., Canada /Howland, William G. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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An application of remote sensing to terrain and vegetation analysis in the Caribou Hills, N.W.T., Canada /Howland, William G. January 1984 (has links)
Remote sensing offers major contributions to the understanding of northern landscapes and vegetation patterns. Recently available instrumentation and analytic techniques, yielding new types of data and new approaches to longstanding problems, are demonstrated in this analysis of terrain conditions and vegetation distributions in the Caribou Hills, N.W.T. The analysis of landform was based on field data, image interpretation and photogrammetric elevation model data. Slope angles and aspects were computed and trend surfaces, residuals and contour maps produced for model areas. Within sampled areas, surface roughness, the degree of dissection and the apparent dominance of either fluvial or mass wasting processes were found to be controlled by slope aspect, snow drifting patterns and the nival melt schedule. Patterns of active layer depth and details of surface materials, morphology and processes were derived from stereoscopic analysis of photographs through linkages with plant associations. Twelve plant associations, defined by field survey, provided a basis for differentiating photographic signatures and vegetation mapping classes. The character and separability of the spectral signatures were reviewed using ratioed and clustered optical film density data. The major advantages of remote sensing as an analytic tool were demonstrated. Remote sensing provides a vast array of geographic data and a unique synthesis of terrain and vegetation conditions offering the researcher key information that is otherwise unavailable.
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Seasonal occurrence of Chrysomelidae in a bluestem prairie near Manhattan, KansasGreene, Gerald L. January 1961 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1961 G79
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Some environmental responses to burning and their effects on flowering in Andropogon gerardiPetersen, Nancy Jean. January 1979 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1979 P482 / Master of Science
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