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The origin of Georgia depression and the Coast Plutonic Complex/Insular Belt province boundary on Hardwicke and West Thurlow Islands, B. C.Nelson, JoAnne Lee January 1976 (has links)
Georgia Depression is a major northwest-trending structural
trough that lies between the Coast Mountains and Vancouver Island, along the western boundary of the Coast Plutonic Complex. Field work on a part of this boundary on Hardwicke and West Thurlow Islands in Johnstone Strait established it as an intrusive
contact between an Upper Jurassic quartz diorite and stratified
rocks of the Vancouver Group. The Vancouver Group in the vicinity of the contact is broken by two major west-northwest trending preplutonic faults. Contact metamorphic conditions
determined from basic and carbonate assemblages are P ,-3 kb.
total
and T . = (650 - 720°C . Post-plutonic fractures and dikes maximum
trend northeast. The main result of the field study was to confirm for a particular area that the western margin of the Coast Plutonic Complex is essentially a magmatic front.
Georgia Depression began to subside in the Upper Cretaceous
as the Coast Plutonic Complex rose. It is proposed that the initial subsidence of Georgia Depression was complementary to the uplift of the Coast Mountains. Georgia Depression is part of the Coastal Trough of western North America, an elongate depression that lies between a series of colinear magmatic arcs (the Coast Plutonic Complex, the Cascades, and the Sierra Nevada) and the western margin of the North American plate. The various sub-basins of the Coastal Trough formed at different times, from the Upper Jurassic to the Late Tertiary, that correspond
to the times of uplift of the adjacent igneous complexes.
This coincidence suggests that the subsidence of the whole Coastal Trough, including Georgia Depression, was coupled to the uplift of the magmatic arcs of North America. The Coastal Trough may be analogous to the marginal synclines developed in Ramberg's (1967) diapir experiments. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
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Studies in equity and common law : the law of trusts in the 18th century, to the end of the chancellorship of Ld. HardwickeBrown, Brendan Francis January 1931 (has links)
No description available.
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Married in a Frisky Mode: Clandestine and Irregular Marriages in Eighteenth-Century BritainSmith, Summer 08 1900 (has links)
The practice of irregular and clandestine marriage ran rampant throughout Britain for centuries, but when the upper class felt they needed to reassert their social supremacy, marriage was one arena in which they sought to do so. The restrictions placed on irregular marriages were specifically aimed at protecting the elite and maintaining a separation between themselves and the lower echelon of society. The political, social, and economic importance of marriage motivated its regulation, as the connections made with the matrimonial bond did not affect only the couple, but their family, and, possibly, their country. Current historiography addresses this issue extensively, particularly in regards to Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act of 1753 in England. There is, however, a lack of investigation into other groups that influenced and were influenced by the English approach to clandestine marriage. The Scots, Irish, and British military all factor into the greater landscape of clandestine marriage in eighteenth-century Britain and an investigation of them yields a more complete explanation of marital practices, regulations, and reactions to both that led to and stemmed from Hardwicke's Act. This explanation shows the commonality of ideas among Britons regarding marriage and the necessity of maintaining endogamous unions for the benefit of the elite.
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