Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4hhp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-09T12:57:37.020Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Subsidence in the European Area

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

The structure of the earth was supposed by Suess to be tripartite, there was an outer layer of rocks mainly granitic, the sal, or sial as it is usually now called. This rested, or “floated”, on a dense layer called the sima, of basaltic character, within which was the earth’s core, or nife, metallic in nature. Such a simple conception has been modified in the light of later knowledge: geologically there is much evidence pointing to the existence of several shells of increasing density within the crust. This is to some extent supported by the evidence of seismology, the layers below the upper sedimentary layer being the Granitic, the Intermediate (of tachylyte or diorite) and Lower Layers (dunite, peridotite, or eclogite) (1). According to the latest information there are four layers intermediate between the granitic and lower layers: the thickness of the sedimentary layer varies from about 2 to 6 kilometres in mountainous regions: the thickness of the granitic layer varies, being about 10 to 12 kilometres in Central Europe. In low-lying regions the total thickness of these two layers is probably about 6 kilometres less than in mountainous regions: “the thicknesses of the other layers are very difficult to determine; the upper two probably have together a thickness of about 15 kilometres, but the others can hardly be determined from the observations” (2).

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1934

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

NOTES AND REFERENCES

(1) Jeffreys, H. “The Earth.”Google Scholar
(2) Jeffreys, H.A Rediscussion of Some Near Earthquakes,” Monthly Notes Royal Astr. Soc. Geophys. Supp., vol. 3.Google Scholar
(3) Joly, J. “The Surface History of the Earth.”Google Scholar
(4)Reports quoted hereunder as U.G.I, i or ii.Google Scholar
(5)A Search for the Mechanism of Earth Movements,” Geol. Mag., LXX.Google Scholar
(6)Scientific Results of the Wegener Expeditions to Greenland,” Geogr. Jour., lxxxi, April, 1933.Google Scholar
(7) Fifth Thule Expedition, vol. iv, pt. 1.Google Scholar
(8) Daly, Post-glacial Warping in Newfoundland and Nova Scotia,” Amer. Journ. Sci., i, 1921.Google Scholar
(9) U.G.I., i, 9.Google Scholar
(10) U.G.I., ii, 11.Google Scholar
(11) Gregory, J. W.Deep Trench on the Floor of the North Sea,” Geogr. Jour., lxxvii, 0106, 1931; also Stamp, “Age of the Strait of Dover,” U.G.I., lxx, 07–12., 1927.Google Scholar
(12) Gordon, Childe Dawn of European Civilization.Google Scholar
(13) Munro, R. Prehistoric Britain.Google Scholar
(14) Steers, J. A. The Unstable Earth, 1932, p. 54.Google Scholar
(15) U.G.I., ii, 5.Google Scholar
(16) U.G.I., ii, 17.Google Scholar
(17) U.G.I., ii, 4.Google Scholar
(18) U.G.I., i, 4.Google Scholar
(19) U.G.I., ii, 16.Google Scholar
(20) U.G.I., i, 2.Google Scholar
(21) U.G.I., i, 1.Google Scholar
(22) U.G.I., ii, 3, and ii, 10.Google Scholar
(23) U.G.I., i, 5.Google Scholar
(24) Ency. Brit., 1929, “Volcano.”Google Scholar
(25) Do. “Patagonia.”Google Scholar
(26) Do. “Petrology.”Google Scholar
(27) Bull. Soc. des Naturalistes de Moscou XL, Geol. Tome x (1), 1932.Google Scholar