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Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions by Stephen J. Reynolds, George H. Davis

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Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions

George H. Davis, Stephen J. Reynolds


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Item Details
ISBN:0471526215
ISBN-13:9780471526216
Title:Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions
Authors:George H. Davis, Stephen J. Reynolds
Category:Maths For Scientists
Format:Paperback
Year:1996
Pages:800
Publisher:John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:John Wiley and Sons
Edition:2nd
Language:English
Dimensions:221mm x 286mm x 36mm
Weight:1.899kg

Annotation
Providing students with methods for use in descriptive analysis and measurement, this text explains how to identify relationships that are critical to the interpretation of structures. Mathematical skills are developed which describe the concepts of stress and strain in natural systems.

Publisher Description
When author George Davis conceptualized the cover illustration for the first edition of Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions, he wanted to emphasize that the human adventure of learning comes from doing; and that new insight springs from careful, detailed examination of field relationships, viewed at all scales from rocks to regions. He asked illustrator David Fisher to combine four photos into the single painting, you see here. The geologist is enveloped by challenging structural relationships of folded rocks in outcrop; the curvature of back and neck, torqued as eyes and brain move closer and closer to clipboard, is the classic language of geologic mapping. When George Davis and new co-author Steve Reynolds contemplated the cover illustration for the second edition of Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions, they asked: "Who else is in the picture?" Stepping back, and handing David Fisher a couple of additional photos, the scene suddenly changed. The original geologist who had been sitting on the outcrop recording data is now up and walking around, gathering new data.
A second geologist has moved into the new foreground, mapping and sketching a system of small-scale imbricate faults. Again, the head is torqued to handle the requirements of fine description and careful mapping. Like so many structural geologists, she seems to thrive on visualization of three-dimensional relationships.

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