Audiobook: The Elements of Geology
- Download 01 Preface & Introductory Note audio
- Download 02 Introduction audio
- Download 03 Ch. I: The Work of the Weather, pt 1 audio
- Download 04 Ch. I: The Work of the Weather, pt 2 audio
- Download 05 Ch. II: The work of Ground Water audio
- Download 06 Ch. III: Rivers and Valleys, pt 1 audio
- Download 07 Ch. III: Rivers and Valleys, pt 2 audio
- Download 08 Ch. IV: River Deposits audio
- Download 09 Ch. V: The Work of Glaciers, pt 1 audio
- Download 10 Ch. V: The Work of Glaciers, pt 2 audio
- Download 11 Ch. VI: The Work of the Wind audio
- Download 12 Ch. VII: The Sea and its Shores audio
- Download 13 Ch. VIII: Offshore and Deep Sea Deposits audio
- Download 14 Ch. IX: Movements of the Earth’s Crust, pt 1 audio
- Download 15 Ch. IX: Movements of the Earth’s Crust, pt 2 audio
- Download 16 Ch. X: Earthquakes audio
- Download 17 Ch. XI: Volcanoes audio
- Download 18 Ch. XII: Underground Structures of Igneous Origin audio
- Download 19 Ch. XIII: Metamorphism and Mineral Veins audio
- Download 20 Ch. XIV: The Geological Record audio
- Download 21 Ch. XV: The Pre-Cambrian Systems audio
- Download 22 Ch. XVI: The Cambrian audio
- Download 23 Ch. XVII: The Ordovician and Silurian audio
- Download 24 Ch. XVIII: The Devonian audio
- Download 25 Ch. XIX: The Carboniferous audio
- Download 26 Ch. XX: The Mesozoic, pt 1 audio
- Download 27 Ch. XX: The Mesozoic, pt 2 audio
- Download 28 Ch. XXI: The Tertiary audio
- Download 29 Ch. XXI: The Quaternary, pt 1 audio
- Download 30 Ch. XXI: The Quaternary, pt 2 audio
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Description
Geology is a science of such rapid growth that no apology is expected when from time to time a new text-book is added to those already in the field. The present work, however, is the outcome of the need of a text-book of very simple outline, in which causes and their consequences should be knit together as closely as possible,—a need long felt by the author in his teaching, and perhaps by other teachers also. The author has ventured, therefore, to depart from the common usage which subdivides geology into a number of departments,—dynamical, structural, physiographic, and historical,—and to treat in immediate connection with each geological process the land forms and the rock structures which it has produced. (from book preface)
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