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Geol. Mag. 134 (1), 1997, pp. 121–142.

Copyright © 1997 Cambridge University Press 121

REVIEWS

TANKARD, A. J., SUAREZ SORUCO, R. & WELSINK, H. J. (eds) 1996. essential source of information for any petroleum explorationist
Petroleum Basins of South America. AAPG Memoir no. interested in Gondwanaland in general and South America in
62. xiii + 792 pp. Tulsa: American Association of particular. Juan Keidel would be well pleased.
Petroleum Geologists. Price US $74.00 (members’ price R. C. Selley
US $49.00) plus shipping and handling; hard covers. ISBN
0 89181 341 1.
TURNER, P. & TURNER, A. (eds) 1995. Palaeomagnetic
Petroleum Basins of South America is dedicated to the memory Applications in Hydrocarbon Exploration and Production.
of Juan Keidel (1877–1954). Dr Keidel was the first head of the Geological Society Special Publication no. 98. vi + 301 pp.
Argentinian Geological Survey. He was a staunch supporter of London, Bath: Geological Society of London. Price
Wegener’s ideas of continental drift, in the days when such £65.00, US $108.00 (hard covers); members’ price £39.00,
ideas were considered heretical, before the plate tectonic revo- US $65.00. ISBN 1 897799 42 X.
lution. This fact sets the stage for the book, because it is much
more than a volume on South American Petroleum Basins. One Because most sedimentary rocks possess only tiny amounts of
of its most useful attributes is the way in which paper after paper ferromagnetic minerals they could not be properly studied dur-
set South American basins into their wider setting in ing the first three decades of palaeomagnetic research. Only red
Gondwanaland. sediments were considered to be widely usable, and even in this
The book is divided into four parts: Regional Setting, case it was quickly recognized that protracted histories of lithifi-
Paleozoic Basins, Mesozoic Rifts, Andean Basins, and Northern cation and diagenesis, as well as sensitivity to later tectonism,
South America. Each part consists of about ten papers. These were often responsible for multiple magnetization and often
are largely co-authored by a mixture of indigenous and exotic complete overprinting. Since the 1980s the advent of sensitive
geologists. The first part, Regional Setting, is particularly use- cryogenic magnetometers and improved techniques of demag-
ful. It opens with a paper by Tankard and a whole field party of netization and analysis have opened up the sedimentary rocks to
co-authors, on ‘Structural and Tectonic Controls of Basin systematic study. Inevitably hydrocarbon-bearing rocks have
Evolution in Southwestern Gondwana During the Paleozoic’. proved to be an important focus of investigation. This volume is
This gives an account of the separation of South America from a compilation of 18 research papers from academic and indus-
southern Africa supported by details of the geology of the two trial contributors which summarizes the state of the art in these
regions. This paper is followed by one on ‘Oil and Gas studies. Whilst most of the results described in the book come
Discoveries and Basin Resource Predictions in Latin America’. from western Europe, and especially from the North Sea Basin,
This short paper provides a succinct statistical review of the his- examples from North America and New Zealand are also
tory of discovery and distribution of South American oil and gas included.
fields. Then comes a paper on ‘Petroleum Basins of Southern The most obvious application of palaeomagnetism to oilfield
South America: An Overview’. This helpful paper presents a investigation, namely borehole to borehole correlation, actually
series of palaeogeographic maps that extend out into the proves to be the least efficacious. Although stable magnetiza-
Atlantic Ocean to include the Falkland Islands, sorry, Malvinas, tions are usually recoverable, their origins are complex. This
basin. Williams then presents ‘A Tectonic Subsidence Analysis means that zones of normal and reversed polarity can seldom be
and Paleozoic Paleogeography of Gondwanaland’. This paper definitively correlated with the Geomagnetic Polarity Time
includes global plate and palaeogeographic reconstructions Scale and all such correlations have to be made within an exist-
throughout Phanerozoic time. These extend beyond ing biostratigraphic framework. Nevertheless, as this book
Gondwanaland to include the continents of the present Northern makes clear, palaeomagnetism has other, and often unique,
Hemisphere, making this a very valuable contribution. After a contributions to make to studies of oilfield diagenesis. Thus a
paper on the ‘Evolution of the Andes, and its Control on primary depositional magnetic remanence may only survive in
Hydrocarbon Habitat’, Part 1 concludes with a paper on the rare chromite and manganese minerals, possibly released in part
‘Correlation of the Phanerozoic strata of South America’. This from silicate hosts, because the more common magnetic
helps readers of the later papers in the volume to see how the minerals are preferentially leached. New magnetic minerals
various stratigraphic terminologies relate from basin to basin. may then be formed which are a record of later events.
The 161 pages that together make up the first part of this The seepage of hydrocarbons, for example, produces a tran-
volume justify its publication irrespective of the merit of the sient reducing environment: iron oxides are replaced by iron
subsequent papers. These will not be reviewed in detail. Suffice sulphides to produce an effect which is often of prospecting
to say they provide an excellent intimate account of the habitat value. In boreholes it leads to changes in magnetic intensities
of oil and gas in South American petroleum basins. The papers and susceptibilities which correlate with zones of high porosity.
are illustrated with maps, cross-sections, burial history curves, The direction of the secondary remanence produced at this stage
seismic lines, and photographs of cores, photomicrographs and can be used to date the timing of oil migration. Other examples
even rocky outcrops. There is a considerable number of pull-out are given where the comparison between zones of primary mag-
pages for the display of regional seismic lines and their geologi- netization (of detrital or early chemical origin) and diagenetic
cal interpretation. Colour printing is sparingly used, and is remanence can separate zones of former vertical and lateral
largely restricted to landscape water colours at the commence- fluid flow.
ment of each part. These are in the primitive style that some will There is a developing methodology associated with the
admire. The book concludes with a full subject index. palaeomagnetic study of borecores which is also documented in
Considered overall, Petroleum Basins of South America is an this book. The viscous magnetizations acquired in the Recent

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122 REVIEWS

magnetic field by grains with short magnetic relaxation times concerned with the location of coals and a few with their extrac-
can be used to orientate the core. However, any ancient rema- tion but few will worry how coal is burnt. This area will con-
nence has first to be separated from magnetizations which may tinue to remain important in the future as more emphasis is
have been acquired during drilling and extraction. These include placed upon using resources efficiently and reducing pollution.
a drilling induced remanence caused by the effects of the core As pointed out by the report the behaviour of coals in a boiler is
barrel, and a partial thermal remanence acquired as the borecore affected by: the nature of the coal blend; the limitations imposed
is raised from the elevated temperatures at depth in the oilfield. by the boiler design, burner position, physical configuration and
The first effect can be recognized and isolated by controlled the heat transfer area in different parts of the boiler; and the
plugging on opposite sides of the borecore whilst the latter can operating conditions used, control possibilities and instrumenta-
be separated by thermal demagnetization. tion. In a useful chapter the authors discuss a wide range of
The editors are to be commended for compiling a volume of methods for the assessment of coal blends. Interestingly coal
value to all workers aiming to integrate palaeomagnetic and petrography is widely used but no mention is made of the possi-
rock magnetic studies into comprehensive recovery of data from bility of using palaeobotanical data. This highlights the divide
boreholes. between those working on how coal is formed and how coal is
J. D. A. Piper used. It is important for future research that coal geologists and
technologists talk to each other. In this light I would recommend
this volume to coal geologists so that they may see how they
WHITE, D. J. 1996. Upgrading Coal: the Essential Step for may contribute to future research programmes on coal combus-
Sustaining Future Markets. vi + 111 pp. Petersfield: tion. I hope that the title will not put off geological libraries
McCloskey Coal Information Service. Price £350.00, US from purchasing the volume.
$595.00 (paperback). No ISBN. Andrew C. Scott
PORTER, D. & SCHMITZ, J. 1995. Utility Coal Procurement.
‘Perspectives’ series, no. IEAPER/20. 31 pp. London: IEA
Coal Research. Price £255 (paperback); substantial dis- JOLLY, L., MILLSTEED, C. & STUART, R. 1994. Indonesian Coal
counts to member countries and educational establish- Prospects to 2010. ‘Perspectives’ series, no. IEAPER/14.
ments. ISBN 92 9029 259 8. 38 pp. London: IEA Coal Research. Price not stated
CARPENTER, A. M. 1995. Coal Blending for Power Stations. (paperback). ISBN 92 9029 246 6.
IEACR/81. 83 pp. London: IEA Coal Research. Price £450 DANIEL, M. 1995. Asian Coal Prospects to 2010. ‘Perspectives’
(paperback); substantial discounts to member countries series, no. IEAPER/18. 64 pp. London: IEA Coal
and educational establishments. ISBN 92 9029 256 3. Research. Price £255 (paperback); substantial discounts to
member countries and educational establishments. ISBN
With a continued rise in world coal production and more com- 92 9029 252 0.
petition in world markets, the question of improving the quality
of product will become increasingly important. In a relatively Whilst there may be a temptation to believe, based on the expe-
slim but expensive volume (with no educational discount), rience of the UK, that coal is in severe decline, evidence from
White considers the range of options for coal upgrading. The Asia–Pacific paints a rather different picture. From these two
volume comprises twelve sections: summary and conclusions; interesting and informative reports it is shown that over recent
introduction; coal cleaning technologies; environmental pres- years energy demand has grown rapidly in most Asian coun-
sures on the use of coal; established preparation processes; tries. Indeed in India alone coal production rose from 90.6 mil-
recent developments and alternative physical cleaning; chemi- lion tonnes in 1982 to 174.8 million tonnes in 1992 and
cal and bio-chemical cleaning; associated developments; utili- production has continued to rise. Here, however, the coal has
ties companies growing awareness of quality issues; the logic of been used for domestic electricity output. Even in Asian coun-
use cycle analysis; prospects for clean coal in advance use tries with low coal, use has increased with Japan for example
options; prospects for upgraded coals in international trade. It is increasing coal use by 15 million tonnes over the period. In
clear that the message here is that for a coal producer to remain total, therefore, coal use in Asian countries (excluding China
competitive, coal cleaning processes are an important consider- and Indonesia) has increased from 220 to 364 million tonnes. So
ation. This volume is interesting but it is not particularly well what of the future to 2010? In total the demand for coal is
illustrated or extensive and most libraries will be put off by the predicted to rise from 493 million tonnes to between 733 and
cost. 1015 million tonnes – so who says prospects for coal are low?!
Whilst the previous volume concerns issues important for the From the analysis of supply and demand it is clear that demand
producers of coal in providing an improved product, the volume is likely to outstrip supply thus being one important target for
by Porter & Schmitz concerns those purchasing coal. This slim coal exporters such as Australia.
volume assesses the coal procurement practices and strategies Indonesia is one country in Asia which is developing its coal
of the electricity utilities. An understanding of the practices of industry to take advantage of this ever expanding market. In the
the purchasers is vital for coal producers and will affect every- report it is considered that Indonesia’s coal exports are likely to
one in the coal industry including geologists. The volume is continue to rise to reach around 35 million tonnes per year but is
well written but is so slim that I doubt it will find its way onto unlikely to increase beyond 45 Mt/y because of the limited
library shelves, which is a pity as it makes interesting reading. size of Indonesia’s higher quality coal reserves. The domestic
Once coal has been purchased it will be burnt in coal-fired market for coal is also projected to rise substantially. Coal
power stations. The run-of-of-the mine coal from the seam can production has risen from almost nothing in 1982 to 28 Mt in
rarely be burnt and an important element in coal purchasing is 1993. Much of this (18 Mt) was exported. Production is pro-
the blending of a variety of coals to very tight specifications. jected to rise substantially over the next few years to between 50
This volume comprises nine chapters: introduction; why and 64 Mt by the year 2000.
blend?; methods of blending; assessing blend properties; com- These two volumes, packed with important data on the coal
bustion properties and behaviour; ash properties and behaviour; industries of many Asian countries, provide important insights
emissions; conclusions and references. Many geologists are into the world coal trade. Clearly a UK approach which belittles

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REVIEWS 123

coal is not appropriate and these volumes show the underlying strate the occurrence of multiple levels in the Guilin karst (p.
strength of a important fossil fuel industry. I hope that both 72). Similarly, in discussing climatic controls on limestone dis-
these volumes will find their way onto geology department solution rates (pp. 23–27) no indication is given of the tech-
library shelves. niques used, or of the reliability of the differences reported.
Andrew C. Scott Morphometric and other data are also reproduced from the orig-
inal source without any indication of variance, and often with a
spurious degree of precision, e.g. Table 11, p. 68, quotes per-
SWEETING, M. M. 1995. Karst in China. Its Geomorphology and centages of 263 isolated peaks developed on different rock
Environment. Springer Series in Physical Environment types to two decimal places (not ± 0.5%), while Table 12 sug-
Volume 15. xi + 265 pp. Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, gests that we are able to measure cumulative volumes of caves
Barcelona, Budapest, Hong Kong, London, Milan, Paris, totalling in excess of 100 000 m3 to the nearest cubic metre. A
Tokyo: Springer-Verlag. Price DM 198.00, Ös 1445.40, secondary result of the extensive inclusion of figures and tables
SFr 187.00 (hard covers). ISSN 0937-3047; ISBN 3 540 derived from other studies, is that in some cases captions are
58846 9. inadequate, and do not provide a complete key to the figure. For
instance, Figure 23 on p. 83 has no explanation of the symbols
This text, published posthumously, is based on extensive excur- used either for the variables graphed (H and h implied by the
sions to China by Marjorie Sweeting over an 18-year period equations or H/h as marked on the axis), or for the two data sets
from 1977, when scientific visitation became possible after the A and B plotted, nor is a reason given for the change from filled
end of the cultural revolution. Sweeting spent time at many of to open symbols where the two lines overlap. Finally, some of
the most important institutions for karst research in China, and the quoted material simply does not support the statements
visited many of the karst areas described in the book. China has made in the text. For instance, the largest caves in the Guilin
a particular and important place in the study of karst areas: area apparently occur in sparry limestones because ‘…of their
about one quarter of terrestrial carbonates terrains occur within greater physico-mechanical strength (i.e. low permeability and
its boundaries, and as 60% of the Chinese population depend on porosity (0.67%) and greater compressive, tensile and shearing
food produced in limestone areas, indigenous scientific study strengths (Table 3))’ (p. 69). In fact, Table 3 shows only average
has a long and illustrious tradition; indeed there are presently compressive and tensile strengths; the former is identical for
more karst specialists in China than any other country in the sparry limestones and dolomites, and actually less than for
world. This book, reporting on Chinese approaches to karst the micritic limestones, while average tensile strength is greater
geomorphology, is thus of some interest. by only 4 and 2 kg/cm2 for the dolomites and sparites respec-
The text adopts a predominantly regional approach. After tively (but no variance is given for the 9 tests undertaken). No
three initial thematic chapters dealing with the physical context data at all are presented to support the assertion that the sparry
(a useful chapter), the history of karst studies and karst termi- limestones have a lower corrosion rate.
nology and types in China, the next seven chapters are devoted There are also a number of silly typographic and editorial
to specific karst areas and the karst types present. There are two errors (for instance p. 13 quotes times in units of BP not yr BP
further thematic chapters on the position of China in world karst (although this is well beyond the timescale of 14C dating for
studies and on karst hydrogeology and chemical characteristics which this style is conventionally adopted), and p. 88 suggests
of karst waters. The latter is somewhat weak given the extensive that total Quaternary denudation is 100–150 mm despite pre-
exploitation of karst waters in China, and focuses predomi- viously quoting a figure of 100–300 mm/1000 years three lines
nantly on regional hydrological differences, rather than dealing above). The reviewer’s initials are also wrong in both the text
with applied hydrogeology or the Chinese approach to develop- and (differently!) in the bibliography.
ment of karst water resources. In summary, despite the stiff price I am sure that this book
The general approach adopted is very much classical, with will be widely quoted, as was Sweeting’s well-known text on
extensive descriptions of the physical setting and morphology karst landforms. I would, however, urge readers to adopt a
of the surface, and to a lesser extent underground landforms critical approach to the material included.
supported by maps and photographs (reproduced to a high stan- P. L. Smart
dard), and morphometric data. This will undoubtedly prove of
utility to those lacking prior experience of the Chinese karst, but
a number of Chinese papers in English have also covered the HART, M. B. (ed.) 1996. Biotic Recovery from Mass Extinction
same ground, although with much less detail. In the Preface, Events. Geological Society Special Publication no. 102.
Sweeting identifies the significant barriers to communication viii + 392 pp. London, Bath: Geological Society of
which she and other western geomorphologists face in China, London. Price £79.00, US $132.00 (members’ price
relating not simply to language but also the less analytical and £39.00, US $65.00); hard covers. ISBN 1 897799 45 4.
more descriptive Chinese thinking on landforms. She has there-
fore drawn heavily on Chinese work published in English, Some time ago Richard Fortey observed that ‘There are extinc-
which is perhaps intellectually more accessible to a non- tions and extinctions’, and so we might also conclude that there
Chinese audience, and also on studies by western scientists are different sorts of biological recovery after a time of disaster
(some 40% of the references included). In particular, the review and ecological trauma. It certainly is rather extraordinary that
of Barbary et al. (1991) is used extensively in the introductory the aftermaths of mass extinctions have received so little
chapters, while the maps and diagrams of the 1985 China Caves attention. Yes, one can understand the almost morbid fascina-
Project form a significant contribution to chapters 4 and 5 tion with dying oceans, impact surges of searing hot rock and
(although I note some of the maps used are not attributed to this rubble sweeping across defenceless ecosystems, kilometre-high
source (e.g. Figure 24 of the Guanyan Cave system)). tsunami crashing down on coastal plains, the blackness at noon
The text is in fact a synthesis of these published sources, with as soot and rock dust lofted high into the atmosphere block out
little if any new research or insight offered. More seriously, the sunlight, but sooner or later the dust settles, the seas return to
much of the published work is accepted uncritically. For normal and life picks up the pieces to rebuild the shattered
instance, no actual data or surveys are presented which demon- ecosystems. Despite the intense interest in the physics and

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chemistry of the process, mass extinctions are only of interest hands. Their discussion of how an ecosystem is transformed has
because they affect a living planet. However severe the disaster an importance that goes far beyond those who specialize on
some groups will always pull through, and perhaps in some Carboniferous mires because it touches on the way in which we
circumstances reset the evolutionary and ecological agendas. understand the self-regulatory nature of persistent ecosystems.
This book arises out of IGCP Project 335, the brief of which Perhaps surprisingly there is little on the K/T boundary itself,
is to address biotic recovery from mass extinctions, and it trans- although Spiejer & van der Zwaan’s update of the situation of
mits to us the proceedings of a meeting held in 1994 at the the famous section in El Kef, Tunisia is equally useful.
University of Plymouth. Not surprisingly the volume covers a Significantly they question to what extent faunal changes in this
broad ground, and contains papers that vary from the widely rel- interval are actually controlled by sea-level changes, as is often
evant to the parochial. A few are so short that their inclusion is supposed, as against oxygenation and productivity. The latter
of questionable usefulness, whereas others are rich in primary may make for a more complex story, but ultimately may provide
data. Of greatest interest to most readers, I suspect, will be the a more realistic framework to explain the extinctions docu-
first three chapters. Bottjer and co-workers begin with a charac- mented in the benthic forams. A series of other papers draws
teristically interesting and stimulating review that draws more heavily on oxygenation, or lack thereof in Oceanic Anoxic
together a number of published strands on such topics as Events (OAE), especially in the mid-Cretaceous. Taking a dif-
onshore–offshore patterns, ichnofabrics, and guild occupation. ferent tack Koch reminds us forcibly and sensibly that seeking
More specifically in the context of ecospace vacation and refill- to understand mass extinctions on the basis of the examination
ing they draw attention again to the intriguing resurgence of of a few stratigraphic sections may be seriously misleading.
stromatolites in early Triassic ecosystems, suggesting a world Only when data have been collected across a wide geographical
that has tumbled back towards a Proterozoic system. They also area can some assertions, such as trophic response to the post
speculate, all too briefly, on the connections between ecospace K/T world, be made with confidence.
availability and the surprising fact, at least to some, that new This book has much of value, and certainly should be pur-
animal bodyplans do not arise as a consequence of such oppor- chased by libraries. Perhaps its reduced price to members of the
tunities. The next chapter, by Kauffman & Harries, is also stim- Geological Society of London will act as a bait to those yet to
ulating, injecting a sense of ecological realism into the mass join this august institution, including your reviewer.
extinction debate. They recognize a series of important ecologi- S. Conway Morris
cal categories, that will help us to dissect the period of biotic
recovery in a more satisfactory manner. One might question
some of the distinctions drawn, notably between so-called dis-
aster species and ecological opportunists, but their concept of SHAW, H. R. 1994. Craters, Cosmos, and Chronicles. A New
crisis progenitor taxa will surely find wide applicability. The Theory of Earth. xlvii + 688 pp. Stanford: Stanford
next chapter by Harries and co-workers further develops these University Press; marketed and distributed outside North
themes to indicate ways in which the seemingly chaotic series America by Cambridge University Press. Price $60.00,
of events that we call a mass extinction may be unravelled once US $79.50 (hard covers). ISBN 0 8047 2131 9.
the ecological properties, especially survival mechanisms, are
understood so as to provide a discernible pattern in the fossil Textbooks on statistics are fond of exemplifying randomness by
record. telling us how soldiers in the early days of this century would
Thereafter the remaining 24 papers for the most part are more take shelter in bomb craters, in the mistaken belief that a location
likely to be of interest to the specialist, although as ever there already hit was less likely to be struck for a second time. Herbert
are gems of information and points of view that will be of bene- Shaw’s central thesis in this challenging volume is that the his-
fit to any palaeobiologist. Armstrong, for example, provides an tory and location of terrestrial impacts by extraterrestrial objects
interesting discussion of the recovery of conodont diversity in is very far from being random, and that there are significant
the early Silurian. He identifies the bathyal region of the oceans patterns in both space and time to the record of such impacts.
as the main recruiting zone for repopulation of the devastated Further, the impact record is intimately linked with Earth history,
shelf environments. Whether expansion of the bathyal region and further again, that the link is not unidirectional in terms of
during the transition between the postulated S and P ocean cause and effect. It may initially be counter-intuitive to think of
states would lead to cladogenesis may require further testing, the influx of impactors as being in part ‘controlled’ by the inter-
but the notion of deeper waters providing refugia and some- nal workings of the Earth, but to one as steeped in the notions of
times evolutionary reservoirs deserves a more comprehensive non-linear dynamics and chaos theory as Shaw, it would actually
treatment. Two other noteworthy chapters are those by Erwin & be counter-intuitive to think in any other way. Anyone doubtful
Pan, on Permo-Triassic snails, and DiMichele & Phillips on of this should consider two well-known facts about the Moon.
the late Carboniferous transition in land floras. The paper One is that the same side of the Moon always faces the Earth;
by Erwin & Pan (incidentally the editor has blundered in mis- this phase-locking of its own rotation and its orbital period about
reading Pan’s given name of Hua-Zhang as his family name) the Earth (what Shaw refers to as ‘spin–orbit resonance’) is not
raises a whole series of intriguing questions concerning the unique in the Solar System and there are other instances of reso-
Permo-Triassic record of the snails. A largely unacknowledged nance such as in the distribution of the orbits of the planets. The
problem has been the role of taphonomic filters: a good part of other is that the nearside of the Moon shows about twice as many
our knowledge of Permian faunas depends on rich silicified fau- Copernican period (1100–0 Ma) large craters as does the far
nas that simply are unavailable in the early Triassic. A particular side. Neither of these facts is likely to be in any sense random.
peculiarity is the apparent abundance of so-called Lazarus taxa Both are suggestive of non-linear, non-Newtonian effects.
(surely an inappropriate name; remember Lazarus was dead). This is a tough and demanding work. Its organization is,
Did these genera, which re-emerge in the mid-Triassic, skulk in appropriately enough, highly non-linear; the main text com-
refugia, and if so, where? Alternatively are they simply homeo- prises a mere 200 pages, but this is previewed in a lengthy
morphic taxa, and if so what might this tell us about the con- Introduction (60 pages) after which comes a section in which all
straints on snail form? In some ways the chapter by DiMichele of the main illustrations are grouped together with substantial
& Phillips takes an even broader approach, but again in expert accompanying explanations (57 pages). The nine chapters of the

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REVIEWS 125

main text are followed by an Epilogue and then by 50 pages of Oman; Wagner et al.). (iii) An analysis of a subaerial exposure
further illustrations and commentary, then another 182 pages of surface and its significance to the designation of sequence
chapter notes. The result is that it is virtually impossible to read boundaries on the basis of stacking patterns (Devonian, Alberta;
the book from beginning to end and the number of pathways Wendte & Muir). (iv) A study focusing on the identification of
through all of the material is essentially infinite. The overall exposure surfaces and porosity preservation (Pennsylvanian and
dynamic effect is heightened by the author’s enthusiastic style, Lower Permian, Texas; Dickson & Saller). The last mentioned
which leads him to write sentences of great length and complex- provides particularly thoughtful treatments of both the factors
ity; it is hard to know whether to praise him for his irrepressibil- determining ultimate porosity and the use of stable isotope pro-
ity or to castigate him for indiscipline! files to detect subaerial exposure surfaces.
As to the science, there is plenty here, and drawn from an This memoir is generally well illustrated and provides a
impressive array of subjects (the reference list runs to nearly 80 useful collection of case studies on a scientifically and economi-
pages). The book’s subtitle – A New Theory of Earth – tells us cally important topic. At £79 it is not inexpensive.
that this is indeed a work of theory, and the challenge will be to Paul Wilson
draw from it a number of specific falsifiable hypotheses through
which to test the central thesis. I thoroughly recommend it to References
anyone concerned to find new perspectives on Earth history, or LOHMANN, K. C. 1988. Geochemical patterns of meteoric diagenetic
to learn more about the wider implications of non-linear dynam- systems and their application to studies of paleokarst. In
ics in the Earth Sciences. The book will not, however, be found Paleokarst (eds N. P. James and P. W. Choquette), pp. 58–80. New
York: Springer-Verlag.
accessible by the broad readership that I think the theory JAMES, N. P. & CHOQUETTE, P. W. 1984. Digenesis 9. Limestones – The
deserves, and I urge the author to consider making his ideas meteoric diagenetic environment. Geoscience Canada 11, 161–94.
more popularly accessible by condensing the essential thesis
into a shorter and more approachable work. I look forward to
reviewing it! LYONS, P. C., MOREY, E. D. & WAGNER, R. H. (eds) 1995.
David G. Smith Historical Perspective of Early Twentieth Century
Carboniferous Paleobotany in North America. Geological
Society of America Memoir 185. xx + 404 pp. Boulder:
BUDD, D. A., SALLER, A. H. & HARRIS, P. M. (eds) 1995. Geological Society of America. Price US $105.00 (hard
Unconformities and Porosity in Carbonate Strata. AAPG covers). ISBN 0 8137 1185 1.
Memoir No. 63. xii + 313 pp. Tulsa: American Association
of Petroleum Geologists. Price US $119.00 plus shipping This substantial volume comprises 29 chapters documenting the
& handling (hard covers); members’ price US $79.00. development of Carboniferous palaeobotany in North America
ISBN 0 89181 342 X. over the last century. To some extent the title is misleading and
may put off potential readers as there is more here than just his-
Thirty years after Seymour Schlanger (USGS Prof. Paper torical sketches. The impetus of the volume has come from a
260-BB) documented correlatable ‘solution unconformities’ in wish by the editors to celebrate and highlight the work of W. C.
the limestone sequences of Pikinni and Anewetak atolls and Darrah. Darrah, they maintain, has been rather neglected and
concluded that such features indicated periods of low eustatic they argue that he was a pivotal figure in the development of
sea level, an AAPG Hedberg Research Conference met in Vail, Carboniferous palaeobotany in North America and had world-
Colorado, to discuss the detection of unconformities and associ- wide influence. His neglect, it is argued, may be related to the
ated porosity in carbonate strata. This book is an outcome charges of plagiarism following the 1939 publication of his text-
of that meeting and addresses four major topics: (1) detection of book of palaeobotany. It is as if to exorcise this ghost that the
unconformities and subaerial exposure; (2) modification of editors push Darrah’s achievements with the zeal of devoted dis-
porosity and permeability during subaerial exposure; (3) ciples. For myself, who whilst using Darrah’s early work was
preservation of exposure-related porosity during burial; and (4) never struck by his overwhelming importance, I found mention
influence of unconformities on subsequent depositional and of him on almost every page of the 400 page volume rather irk-
diagenetic patterns. The editorial foreword is concise and gives some (the first editor is only cited a little less!). I suspect that
a well written outline of how the chapters contribute to these this over enthusiasm may turn off readers from what is an inter-
topics. These chapters comprise fifteen case studies and, as esting volume in many ways.
such, the book complements a number of excellent previously The volume is divided into five sections. The first section
published systematic reviews of carbonate diagenesis in the contains four articles concerning the life and works of Darrah
meteoric zone (James & Choquette, 1984; Lohmann, 1988). (73 pages). Darrah comes over as a normal palaeobotanist pub-
Chapter one is a timely account of the controls and effects of lishing, working with colleagues, exchanging letters and
subaerial exposure on diagenesis within the Plio-Pleistocene reprints. The detail with which his life is documented seems
subsurface sequences of Great Bahama Bank (Beach) and is fol- rather obsessive. The story of his demise following the charges
lowed by a hydrogeochemical study of diagenesis within uplifted of plagiarism is, however, fascinating and I would love to read a
deposits of similar age from the Ryukyu Islands (Matsuda et al.). totally objective account. This chapter in Darrah’s life obviously
Interestingly, the latter of these chapters argues strongly that the had a major effect on his research career. A complete bibliogra-
key to diagenetic alteration in carbonate sequences composed phy of Darrah’s work is given.
predominantly of calcite (as opposed to magnesian calcite and In the second section portraits of five selected European
aragonite) is not an active hydrologic environment but CO2 palaeobotanists are presented: Jogmans, Gothan, Bertrand,
fluxes into the groundwater system. Other chapters include the Florin and Stopes. These contributions are of varying quality. In
following. (i) A regional study of a lower Miocene carbonate several cases I was frustrated by the continual insertion of refer-
platform from South China introduces the concept of ‘chaotic’ or ence to Darrah when clearly this was often peripheral to the
diagenetic seismic facies. (ii) Complementary studies of reser- main story. In general I found these essays well written and
voir creation (British North Sea, Vahrenkamp) and reservoir interesting although the chapter on Florin came across as rather
degradation and compartmentalization (West Texas, China and superficial, and I would have liked to have seen an article by

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126 REVIEWS

someone who knew or had worked with him or was able to com- search for information on active volcanoes the authors are keen
ment on his research. Clearly each of these palaeobotanists was to stress that ‘It must be recognized as an inescapably incom-
a major influence on the development of palaeobotany not only plete record’, not least because most global volcanism occurs on
in Europe but also worldwide. the sea floor and yet few submarine eruptions have been docu-
The third section comprises twelve portraits of North mented in the scientific literature.
American palaeobotanists. Many of these I would rate very All volcanoes active in Holocene or Recent times have been
highly but others had significantly less impact. The portraits of listed, and the Pleistocene/Holocene boundary has been taken as
Schopf, Arnold, Wilson and Andrews are particularly interest- 10 000 years BP. In other words, all volcanoes known to have
ing and I appreciated the many and varied photographs that been active since 10 000 years BP or since 8000 years BC have
bring the subject to ‘life’ (two of those highlighted have only been included. Because of the lack of widespread prehistoric
‘retired’!). The fourth section of three portraits highlights ama- dating of recent volcanism, half of the volcanoes listed have no
teur collectors and this must be considered of much more local dated eruption but are recorded in the text because they show
interest. clear evidence of having erupted in the last few thousand years.
The most useful section of this volume to non-historians is Only 13% of the eruptions listed are older than 2000 years, but
the final one on ‘special papers reflecting W. C. Darrah’s interest these form a rapidly growing part of the file. The main building
or influence’. I find the title of this section rather pretentious as blocks of the data file have been the Catalog of Active
many of us have equally broad interests, but the topics chosen Volcanoes, the Bulletin of Volcanic Eruptions and the
have wide appeal. The first two chapters of this section concern Smithsonian SEAN-GVN Bulletins.
arguments on stratigraphy and are perhaps less enthralling but An extensive introduction to the book summarizes previous
useful in summarizing the history of the many problems in cor- volcano lists, sources of information used in compilation of the
relation. The final three chapters are of much greater signifi- book, the years of volcanic activity covered, the volcano num-
cance and I suspect of all the chapters these will be the most bering scheme and the abbreviations used in the data tables. The
quoted in the volume. The chapter by Phillips & Cross on early codes and abbreviations are also provided on the inside front
and mid-twentieth century coal-ball studies in North America cover for easy reference. The book uses a numbering scheme,
makes fascinating reading about a subject which until only a derived from the Catalogue of Active Volcanoes of the World, to
few years ago held centre stage in Carboniferous palaeobotany. place all volcanoes into one of 19 regions. The world map on the
I certainly would have liked the story to have been continued! inside front cover serves as a useful reference for this scheme; a
From a teaching point of view the paper by Gastaldo, more detailed map is provided on the inside back cover. The
Pfefferkorn & DiMichele is certainly the most useful, consider- introduction summarizes the volcano data in the file and com-
ing the taphonomic and sedimentologic characterization of ments cautiously on the historical record. It illustrates the World
roof-shale floras. There are here a number of new figures and population growth in parallel with the number of volcanoes
summary tables which many will find very useful. These reported to be active each year. It highlights the fact that report-
authors must be congratulated on summarizing an interesting ing of volcanic activity has improved dramatically over time but
field with up-to-date information. The final chapter by Cross & that even in the last 200 years historical ‘blips’ in reporting, such
Kosanke considers the history and development of as World War I and World War II, have overshadowed trends in
Carboniferous palynology in North America during the early volcanism and that socio-economic and exploration influences
and middle twentieth century. This was a most interesting can explain all major trends in our recent volcanological record.
period with the subject first developing under the impetus of The authors point out that the best evidence that these trends are
coal studies and subsequently because of the use of palynology apparent rather than real comes from the record of large erup-
in oil exploration. tions alone. The large eruptions with a volcanic explosivity
Overall this volume contains a wide variety of material but I index (VEI) > 4, which have occurred at a rate of nearly one per
suspect it is one that many on tight library budgets may feel year for the last 200 years, are far reaching and are not likely to
obliged to omit. Personally I am pleased to have a copy but feel have been missed in the recent record. Their constancy over the
that at $105 the cost will prohibit many from buying the book. A past 120 years implies that the wide variation in the overlying
slimmer volume without the excessive references to Darrah record of all eruptions is solely due to the variation in smaller
would have perhaps been preferable but in this case the volume events that are more likely to be missed. Thus the authors
would probably not have been written. demonstrate that our record for small eruptions is sound only for
Andrew C. Scott recent decades but that the record for larger events is good for
more than a century.
The directory of volcanoes is divided into 19 sections which
SIMKIN, T. & SIEBERT, L. 1994. Volcanoes of the World, 2nd ed. deal with the 19 volcanic regions, examples of which are
xi + 349 pp. Tucson: Geoscience Press for the Smithsonian Europe to Caucasus, Indonesia and Andaman Islands, and
Institution. Price US $25.00 (hard covers). ISBN 0 945005 Hawaii and Pacific Ocean. Each section opens with detailed
12 1. maps, showing the relative positions of volcanoes (to a level not
possible on world maps) and their numbers, and an interesting
Production of the 1994 edition of Volcanoes of the World few paragraphs on the geography of the region. The book lists
reflects a mammoth, sustained task since this particular project 389 volcanoes known to have been active this century and these
of cataloguing volcanic eruptions began in 1971. The book are designated by solid red triangles on the directory maps. A
contains (1) a directory of volcanoes, (2) lists of fatalities and further 231 earlier AD eruptions are represented by part-filled
evacuations at volcanoes, (3) a chronology of eruptions, (4) a red triangles, and 689 BC or undated eruptions have been
gazetteer of volcano names and (5) references. It is a unique, allocated open red triangles. A fourth category for less certain
useful reference text that all volcanologists working at active activity in the last 10 000 years is represented by small open
volcanoes should both have access to and be contributing to. red triangles and 202 locations have been recorded. Therefore,
The 1994 edition is an up-date of the 1981 book in which in total 1511 volcanoes are listed in Volcanoes of the World.
over 170 ‘new’ volcanoes active in the last 10 000 years have Within each section of the directory the volcanoes are listed
been added to the original data set. Despite their comprehensive by number. A single line of geographical and geological

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REVIEWS 127

information, which includes name, subregion, latitude, longi- provided in the references at the back of the book. The refer-
tude, elevation, volcano type (i.e. the morphology, such as stra- ences are listed chronologically by region and a list of abbrevia-
tovolcano, tuff cone, maar), volcano number and status (i.e. the tions used in citations is provided at the start of this section.
reason for including the volcano in the compilation, such as This text is a very fine attempt to catalogue all the active vol-
because it has had an historical eruption or because radiocarbon canoes of the World and their events of the last 10 000 years.
dating implies that it has been active in the last 10 000 years) is The task that the authors have set themselves is enormous and
provided for each volcano. Each dated eruption for the volca- will never be finished. The authors are persistently up-dating
noes listed is then summarized on a single line chronologically. their data set and the 1994 edition of Volcanoes of the Eoeld is a
The eruption start date by year, month and day, where known snap-shot in time of our current record. The text will be an
are given, with an indication of the uncertainties. When a date is invaluable source of information for scientists initiating
not historical, but results from a dating technique, that technique research programmes at active volcanoes, for those enquiring
is shown by a letter code immediately preceding the start year. A about hazards of particular volcanoes and as a data set for World
brief summary of SOFAR, dendrochronology, varve count, ice and regional trends of volcanic activity. Simkin & Siebert and
core, anthropology, lichenometry, magnetism, radiocarbon, their co-workers are to be congratulated on production of this
thermoluminescence, tephrochronology, potassium–argon, volume. I would recommend that all volcanologists use and
argon–argon and fission track dating techniques is provided in contribute to future editions of Volcanoes of the World.
the introduction. The directory indicates the presence of 20 Jennie Gilbert
characteristics for each eruption. The first four describe whether
the eruption took place from a central crater, flank vent, radial
fissure or regional fissure. The next characteristics deal with WILSON, C. (ed.) 1994. Earth Heritage Conservation. 272 pp.
eruptions interacting with water, i.e. whether they were subma- London, Bath: Geological Society of London, in associa-
rine or subglacial eruptions, or generated a new island or mud- tion with the Open University. Price £15.00, US $25.00
flows. The next characteristics deal with explosive volcanism (paperback), plus £2.00 postage and packing. ISBN 1
and indicate whether eruptions were explosive, produced pyro- 897799 03 9.
clastic flows, were phreatic and produced fumarolic events. O’HALLORAN, D., GREEN, C., HARLEY, M., STANLEY, M. & KNILL, J.
Other characteristics deal with the production of lava flows and (eds) 1994. Geological and Landscape Conservation.
lava lakes, lave domes and lava spines. Finally, the effects of Proceedings of the Malvern International Conference
that particular eruption on humans are summarized; the number 1993. xiv + 530 pp. London, Bath: Geological Society of
of fatalities are listed and whether or not damage to property London. Price £70.00, US $117.00 (hard covers). ISBN 1
occurred. Also included is an indication of whether mudflows 897799 09 8.
and tsunamis were generated. The VEI is used as a measure of
the size of the eruption and the volume of erupted products is In 1840, Louis Agassiz pointed to glacial striae on Blackford
given where known. Therefore, the directory condenses infor- Hill in Edinburgh as evidence that Scotland had been glaciated.
mation on the location of volcanoes, geographic data, morphol- This first demonstration of prehistoric glaciation in the British
ogy, activity status and known eruptive history. This is all Isles was duly recognized and commemorated on site by the
achieved in just 125 pages of tables! The tables are in a com- City Fathers of the day. In doing so, ‘Agassiz Rock’ also became
puter format which allow rapid retrieval of information by the the first recognized site of geological conservation in the British
reader and ready manipulation by the authors and their co- Isles. Now over 3000 geological conservation sites are recog-
workers so that the tables may be continually up-dated. nized and three separate new national conservation agencies
The fatalities and evacuations section tabulates all fatal erup- (NCAs–English Nature, etc.) have responsibility for them.
tions known to the authors, in 11 pages, and all evacuations Despite the common ground of the titles and aspirations of
between 1976 and 1994, in one page. A summary page these two books, they are very different creatures. Both make
describes the codes used in the fatality section. Fatalities are novel and important contributions to the literature on what has
arranged in the same sequence as the preceding directory, with become an important, if somewhat problematic, interface
the volcano name and number followed by entries for each fatal between geology and conservation. At one level, geology and
eruption, carrying date, number of deaths and the proportion conservation, especially landscape conservation, might seem a
that can be assigned to specific causes. For cross-referencing contradiction in terms. For geologists the study of the ‘geo’ still
between sections, both volcano number and start date of the requires as much exposure of rock as possible, preferably fresh
eruption are shown. rock as found in sea cliffs and working quarries and unencum-
The chronology of eruptions section lists the 7886 eruptions bered with soil, vegetation or concrete sea defences. However,
known to the authors chronologically by eruption start date. in their different ways, these two books address these inherent
It displays all known volcanism in each year up to 1993. The problems and illustrate a variety of solutions.
volcano number allows cross-referencing to the directory. The Earth Heritage Conservation is an introductory text designed
chronology of eruptions is interspersed with 20 figures showing for a mixed readership, from conservationists with little or no
a range of volcanic processes, some of which are paintings from knowledge of geology through to professional geologists, with
the Maurice and Katia Krafft collection. little or no knowledge of conservation. As befits its Open
Because volcano names are commonly confused by syn- University parentage, the book is designed to be used as a work-
onyms, official geographic name changes, subsidiary feature ing textbook. There are study comments for each chapter,
names, and the grouping of nearby features in different ways, for example outlining aims and objectives of conservation;
the authors have compiled an alphabetical list of all 10 400 suggested activities, mainly questions such as ‘from your under-
volcano names in the file. This is the gazetteer part of the book. standing of the conservation issues raised … list the categories
Here, this multitude of volcano names is related to the 1511 of interest groups’, etc.; boxes (e.g. the justification for Earth
used in the directory. The volcano number is used for cross- Heritage conservation); and finally summaries with bullet
referencing to the directory. A summary page is provided at the points (e.g. conservation of Earth Heritage sites is justified
start of the gazetteer. primarily • to allow research for the advancement of science
The source documents used in compilation of the data set are and for the success of industry…). To the ordinary reader such

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128 REVIEWS

structure can be obtrusive but it is very helpful to the student for Conservation Committee in association with the Geological
learning and reference. Society and Geologists’Association. Under the headings of var-
Ten sites are described to illustrate the range of geological ious themes, there are contributions ranging from ‘Conservation
features, from the sand dune system of Morfa Harlech, of geomorphological landscapes in Taiwan’ (Wang et al.),
Gwynedd through Barton Cliffs, Hampshire to Shap Quarry in through ‘The role of voluntary organisations in Earth science
Cumbria. For each site a basic outline of the geology is given, conservation in the UK’ (Green) to ‘Rock poems, rock music:
followed by the reasons for conservation, how it is conserved, using poetry and the arts to interpret geology’ (Carter &
who uses the site and concludes with a discussion of how the Badman). In other words, with nearly a hundred short contribu-
conservation and other interests are reconciled. My only quibble tions there is a bit of something to suit all tastes.
here is that it would have been better if the authors had selected One of the clearest messages that recurs throughout these
illustrative sites, which have been already described in the pub- international contributions is the plea for better understanding
lished series of Geological Conservation Review books. Cross of geology (Burek & Davies), its educational (Wilson; Fisher)
reference could then have been made to much more complete and even touristic potential. At all levels of society and civil
site descriptions, for those readers that want more than a GCSE administration, there appears to be a lack of appreciation of the
level of geology. contribution that the materials of the Earth continue to make to
These brief descriptions are followed by a very basic intro- modern society. Britain needs over 200 million tonnes of rock
duction to geology and geological field work, based on two of aggregate each year for civil construction. Various solutions to
the previously described sites and a quick trip through Britain’s the communication gap are proposed but perhaps one of the
geological history. There is even an optional kit of rock and most promising has been the typically British ‘grass root’ solu-
mineral samples, which can be bought to accompany the book tion. Through the RIGS scheme (Harley), local amateur and
and these samples are referred to in the text. I am slightly sur- professionalized conservation groups have been encouraged to
prised that there are not a couple of audio tapes and a video as help develop and manage their own ‘patches’ (Cutler; Toghill).
well but if you want those you will have to sign up for the Open There is a considerable question of whether the different
University general geology course (S236). ‘players’ in the conservation debate have reconcilable goals or
The last part of the book is called ‘Conservation in action’ not. Is it simply a question of industry (including tourism, see
and is of most interest to geologically literate readers. Being De Bastion), commerce and land owners (Toghill) versus con-
geologically biased, I think that it is a pity that this section did servationists? Britain, through the JNCC and NCAs, has a sub-
not form the bulk of the book. Reference is again made back to stantial organization with a responsibility for conservation and
the early site descriptions, with elaboration of the justifications supporting legislation but a lack of financial resources to really
for site selection and the potential threats to their conservation. enforce the legislation, so conflicts of interest generally have to
For anyone concerned with the teaching of geology in the field, be resolved by the power of persuasion. This power can be
such conservation issues are of increasing importance in these pretty limited, especially in the present economic climate. If
crowded little islands. The academic community has a duty to geological conservation is to develop for the benefit of every-
engage in the issues and support the conservation efforts of the one, then the arguments for conservation have to be broadcast;
underfunded NCAs, in spite of various problems. For example, this book helps serve the cause of geological conservation and
there have been complaints that publication of site details may should be available as a reference in all geology libraries.
lead to increased despoliation by unscrupulous collectors. Douglas Palmer
Whilst this is a risk, it must be balanced against the wider bene-
fits of site conservation in general and a greater public aware-
ness of the need for conservation of all kinds. There are much ELLIS, N. V., BOWEN, D. Q., CAMPBELL, S., KNILL, J. L.,
greater threats to geological sites than from greedy collectors. MCKIRDY, A. P., PROSSER, C. D., VINCENT, M. A. &
Tipping and landfill of old quarry sites and the building of sea WILSON, R. C. L. 1996. An Introduction to the Geological
defences, which covers up coastal sites, are the most common Conservation Review. Geological Conservation Review
problems. Series no. 1. ix + 131 pp. Peterborough: Joint Nature
An important aspect of the whole conservation strategy that is Conservation Committee; distributed by Natural History
perhaps not fully appreciated, is that individual SSSIs are not Book Service, 2–3 Wills Road, Totnes, Devon TQ9 5XN,
generally ‘stand alone’ sites but are part of site networks and UK. Price £30.00 plus postage and packing (hard covers).
supposed to be backed up by the Regionally Important ISBN 1 86107 403 4.
Geological/Geomorphological Sites (RIGS). So that even if an
individual site is irreparably damaged or lost, there will still be After some ten volumes of the proposed 42 in the Geological
representation of that particular stratigraphic horizon elsewhere Conservation Review series having now been published,
in the region. the Introduction has at last appeared, following a somewhat
The view points of the various interested parties are presented difficult and protracted preparation by many hands. The result
so that you can come to your own conclusions about individual is a well produced volume, aimed primarily at non-geolo-
cases. There are the usual questions, inviting reader participa- gists. However, since the volume contains an ‘official’ introduc-
tion, which will be ideal as basic student exercises for anyone tion to the rationale of site selection and conservation, the
presenting an introductory course on geological conservation. I relevant sections should be read by all geologists concerned
know undergraduate Earth Science courses are already over- with these issues. The protracted gestation period reflects
loaded but all graduates ought to be aware of conservation various structural changes in the management and preparation
issues today and this book is a good starting point and comple- of the whole GCR series, which now fortunately seems to have
ments Nigel Woodcock’s Geology and Environment in Britain settled down with volumes appearing fairly regularly.
and Ireland (1994, UCL Press). The Geological Conservation Review series of books,
Geological and Landscape Conservation is a very different describing a total of some 2300 designated geological SSSIs, is
kind of text in that it is a collection of papers from the Malvern perhaps the most ambitious book publishing project in British
International Conference on Geological and Landscape geology since the Geological Survey launched their series of
Conservation in 1993. This was convened by the Joint Nature Sheet Memoirs back in 1846. The GCR series covers all types

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REVIEWS 129

of geological sites, from igneous rocks (British Tertiary and III. Pacific Neogene Events in Time and Space (5 papers).
Volcanic Province), through structures (Caledonian Structures In Part I the papers concern planktonic foraminifera and their
in Britain South of the Midland Valley), stratigraphy (Marine isotopic characteristics and also diatoms in relation to Neogene
Permian of England) and fossils (Fossil Reptiles of Great palaeoceanography, the terrestrial pollen record in marine sedi-
Britain) to geomorphology (Karst and Caves of Great Britain, ments, in addition to reviews of global climate evolution, New
in press). A wide range of predominantly academic geologists Zealand palaeoclimates, and depositional systems associated
have already been involved in the eleven published volumes. with upwelling in the eastern Pacific margin including the clas-
And by the time the series has been completed, a significant pro- sic Miocene Monterey Formation. Part II contains two papers,
portion of the academic community will have been involved one one applying palaeomagnetic data to interpret the deformation
way or another in their preparation. Hopefully this spread of and palaeogeography of Japan, and the second using interpreted
involvement across most of the geology departments in the plate configurations to understand changes in surface-water
country will lead to a greater awareness and use of the series circulation between the Pacific and Indian oceans.
volumes for teaching and research. Of the five papers in Part III two concern planktonic
The series is a ‘grand endeavour’ in the Victorian tradition of foraminiferal evolution and biostratigraphical application, one
the Blue Books or the County Survey series. It is particularly larger foraminiferal biostratigraphy, one mollusc evolution and
important for its overall impact and use that the series be com- climate, and one biotic and abiotic events in the North Pacific.
pleted and not fall foul of some penny pinching cutback. The The work on larger foraminifera by the late C. G. Adams is of
JNCC is to be congratulated on its continuing commitment to interest as the corpus of his work on the Indo-Pacific region is
the series and I hope that it is matched by support for the currently being prepared for publication by The Natural History
endeavour from the geological community. Museum.
Much of the subject and the objectives of this introductory The book will be primarily of specialist interest only as, other
volume was pre-empted to a considerable extent by the previ- than a short preface, there is no attempt to link the individual
ously published Earth Heritage Conservation (1994, edited by papers or provide an overview of the topic.
Chris Wilson and published by the Open University; see review A. R. Lord
above). Again there is a brief ‘potted’ introduction to the geo-
logical history of Britain for non-specialists before the more
important sections on the ‘why and wherefore’ of the JENKINS, D. G. (ed.) 1993. Applied Micropalaeontology. xi + 269
Geological Conservation Review. Apart from considerable pp. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer. Price Dfl. 170.00,
stylistic and design differences where this book does usefully US $99.00, £75.00 (hard covers). ISBN 0 7923 2264 9.
differ from the OU text is that Ellis’s book uses extended
examples from the published volumes, to which the reader can The title suggests a comprehensive treatment of the subject but
refer for further detail. The various major themes of geological in fact the contents are seven invited chapters by different
conservation, such as the concept of ‘networks’, are illustrated authors, curiously not including Graham Jenkins himself.
from the published volumes on the Marine Permian of England, S. D. Houghton describes Recent coccolith sedimentation
the Igneous Rocks of South-West England, Palaeozoic patterns in the North Sea and seeks to apply the results to
Palaeobotany and the Quaternary of the Thames. Likewise, the palaeoceanographical analysis of comparable fossil environ-
questions of site selection, problems of conservation in working ments. The Recent data, based on a relatively limited number of
quarries, eroding cliff faces, etc., are also illustrated by sample points, is of general interest but the palaeoceanographi-
examples from published volumes but here there is some cal application of coccoliths and other calcareous nannofossils
duplication of examples with the Wilson volume. has made considerable advances since this study was written.
The Ellis volume is a fairly lavish book, well illustrated with The chapter by M. C. Keen on the palaeoenvironmental use
colour photos of sites and well structured for ease of reference. of ostracods is a summary of previously published work, mostly
By comparison, the Wilson OU volume has much more of an by the author on the Eocene of the Hampshire Basin, supple-
heuristic approach and lots of practical ‘hands on’ exercises. mented by a section on mid Mesozoic non-marine assemblages
The choice depends on what you want from the volume. For a from NW Europe, China and Brazil. R. W. Jones describes
clear and well presented reference to the rationale of the Recent foraminifera found associated with a biogenic gas seep
Geological Conservation Review, which can be easily accessed in the North Sea, thereby adding to the growing body of infor-
and read fairly quickly, the new Ellis volume is ideal, whereas mation about living biota found with submarine hydrocarbon
the Wilson OU volume is well designed as a teaching text that seeps.
can be used independently by students or for group work. The chapter by P. D. Copestake on micropalaeontology in
Douglas Palmer hydrocarbon exploration in the North Sea is a useful overview
of what microfossils can tell the explorationist and development
geologist, how the information is obtained, and the appropriate
TSUCHI, R. & INGLE, J. C., Jr. (eds) 1992. Pacific Neogene. fossil groups to use in different circumstances, combined with a
Environment, Evolution, and Events. Proceedings of the number of examples and case histories. The growing import-
5th International Congress on Pacific Neogene ance of microfossils for biosteering horizontal wells is not
Stratigraphy and IGCP-246, Shizuoka, Japan, 6–10 mentioned; however, this contribution is helpful as a teaching
October 1991. ix + 257 pp. Tokyo: University of Tokyo aid.
Press. Price not stated. ISBN 0 86008 491 4; 4 13 068206 7. R. V. Tyson’s chapter on ‘Palynofacies Analysis’ is also a
valuable overview for the general reader and for teaching pur-
The book contains a series of contributions presented to the poses. The scientific importance of the chapter has been
Fifth International Congress on Pacific Neogene Stratigraphy, eclipsed by his book Sedimentary Organic Matter: Organic
as part of IGCP Project 246 ‘Pacific Neogene Events in Time facies and palynofacies (Chapman & Hall, 1994). The descrip-
and Space’. The papers, by an international group of 17 authors, tion of the sequence stratigraphy of the Early Cretaceous age
are grouped into sections as: I. Paleoenvironment of the Pacific Barrow Group, offshore NW Australia, by R. W. Jones and
(8 papers); II. Tectonic Evolution of the Pacific (2 papers); others, is an interesting case study, in addition to providing

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130 REVIEWS

valuable regional geological information. The final chapter by topic of log to seismic calibration is totally omitted. A few more
M. B. Hart provides examples of micropalaeontology applied to words on seismic resolution and its physical basis would not
engineering and economic geological problems. The case his- have come amiss.
tories used are from site investigation studies for the Channel Many photographs and seismic sections have reproduced
Tunnel, the Thames Barrier and a road development, from work poorly, and/or are uninformative. While the seven seismic/
on landslips, and from estimation of reserves of economically petrophysical colour plates are excellent, three of them are sim-
useful sediments, e.g. chalk for cement manufacture. ple duplicates of black and whites elsewhere! The references are
The book is arranged in an uninviting style which does not both too numerous and insufficiently up-to-date for an under-
encourage the reader and many diagrams are too small to be graduate text; of 166 references for Reefs and Deep Water
easily legible. The cover depicts an offshore drilling platform, Sands only 12 postdate 1985. The seminal work of Walker and
suggesting that the content refers to industrial application in the his students in this period on the Cardium shoreface/shelf using
strict sense. The chapters are a mixture of the applied in an well logs and cores is not referenced. A shorter and better mix of
economic sense, the ‘applied’ as in being generally useful for the classics and the current would be preferable. Space saved in
earth scientists, and case studies. Thus, the title is misleading in this way could have provided a much needed short illustrative
that a coherent account of the economic applications of review of sedimentary structures, included glacial environments
micropalaeontology is not provided. and provided the textual qualifications so often lacking. ‘The
A. R. Lord coarser the sediment, the higher its permeability’ (p. 45) may be
true of many surface sediments but is not necessarily at all true
of ancient sedimentary rocks.
David James

SELLEY, R. C. 1996. Ancient Sedimentary Environments and


their Sub-Surface Diagnosis, 4th ed. xvii + 300 pp. LISLE, R. J. 1996. Geological Structures and Maps. A Practical
London, Glasgow, Weinheim, New York, Tokyo, Guide, 2nd ed. viii + 104 pp. Oxford: Butterworth/
Melbourne, Madras: Chapman & Hall. Price £24.99 Heinemann. Price £16.99 (paperback). ISBN 0 7506
(paperback). ISBN 0 412 57970 7. 2588 0.

The fourth edition of this popular and long-running text aims The ability to interpret geological maps is regarded, for the time
very laudably to provide a link between classical sedimentol- being anyway, as an essential skill for Earth Science students.
ogy, wireline logs and seismic in a methodological framework Together with an appreciation of stratigraphy, map interpreta-
for the diagnosis of depositional environment and to illustrate tion in three dimensions underpins the reconstruction of local
the economic benefits of such work, especially for the oil indus- and regional geological histories. Geological maps are a vital
try. In this it has no competition. It has been updated to include visual and analytical tool in applied geology, not least petro-
sequence stratigraphy and some 3D seismic but retains leum exploration. Even diehard proponents of Earth Science as
Professor Selley’s inimitable written style with the customary a merely a system of physical, chemical and biological
mix of the, to me, both amusing and mildly irritating asides to processes have to admit that map interpretation provides a use-
keep readers on their toes. ful conceptual and intellectual challenge for students.
The text preaches a common sense approach, admits the dan- No less a challenge is that of designing an effective course in
ger of generalizations and provides bold simple diagrams. The mapwork. There are limits to what can be taught rather than
summaries of characteristic facies and dip meter responses are learned through practical exercises. Consequently, books of col-
nicely judged and the inclusion of Formation Micro Images is lected ‘problem maps’ have had a guaranteed market for
very welcome. The case studies are both helpful and in several decades. For some time Bennison’s An introduction to geologi-
instances (e.g. the Cambrian–Silurian of North Africa) provide cal structures and maps (Edward Arnold, 1964, 1969, 1975,
useful alternatives to more popular examples. The price is 1985, 1990) was the UK’s best seller. This supremacy was chal-
attractive and I suspect undergraduates will continue to find the lenged almost annually from 1986 onwards by Butler & Bell’s
book an easy and convenient text for examination revision: they Interpretation of geological maps (Longman, 1986), the first
will, however, need to be made aware that mistakes and danger- edition of Richard Lisle’s Geological structures and maps: a
ous oversimplifications are not uncommon. I consider the book practical guide (Pergamon, 1988), Boulter’s Four-dimensional
to be insufficiently discursive and inadequately soundly based analysis of geological maps (Wiley, 1989), Bolton’s Geological
physically to be likely to attract many postgraduates or industry maps: their solution and interpretation (CUP, 1989), Maltman’s
professionals. Geological maps: an introduction (Open University Press,
The section on sequence stratigraphy is decidedly weak, 1990) and Powell’s Interpretation of geological structures
being drawn into lengthy discussion challenging the time signif- through maps (Longman, 1992).
icance of most seismic reflections (surely many have signifi- Lisle’s book skilfully combined a simplicity of style with a
cance, some do not!) and omitting both the Vail ‘sea-slug’ rigorous geometrical approach. It was clearly arranged in seven
diagram and discussion of its exciting predictive elements. chapters, economically entitled geological maps, uniformly dip-
Maximum flooding surfaces appear, wrongly, separating indi- ping beds, folding, faulting, unconformity, igneous rocks and
vidual parasequences (Fig 1.2) and lying immediately under a folding with cleavage. Each chapter comprised a clear text fol-
transgressive system tract (Fig 7.6). Incised valleys and ravine- lowed by relevant exercises. It was copiously and precisely
ments are not discussed. There is no seismic line with a full sys- illustrated with photographs and two-colour graphics. However,
tem tract interpretation. There is little or no physical it suffered from Pergamon’s choice of a restrictively small page
explanation of petrophysical log response: not all SP logs kick size. Text became unavoidably separated from relevant figures
left in sand and the CNL log diagnoses shale because it and photos, problem maps were deliberately isolated from
responds to hydrogen in both matrix mineralogy and pore fluid. their accompanying questions, and many figures had to be set
Seismic reflections are wrongly explained solely in terms of landscape on the page.
velocity contrast (not acoustic impedance) and the essential I do not know what Mammonism has led to Butterworth-

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REVIEWS 131

Heinemann becoming the publishers of the second edition. The first 100 or so pages of the book for Part I, are what we
However, they have matched their financial acumen with a bet- might term ‘preliminaries’ setting the scene, explaining the con-
ter talent for book design than their predecessors. Their gener- text of investigation, techniques, measuring time, tectonics and
ous A4 format allows for two-column text and a more logical biogeography all of which are very much grist to the mill in
and agreeable placement of figures. The photographs are repro- terms of content. The authors do however also dwell at some
duced with greater clarity. The main text remains virtually length on systematics and phylogeny analysis and, perhaps most
unchanged, but the problem maps at the end of each chapter importantly, establish the logic and methodology of investiga-
have been rearranged and supplemented. In all respects, the tion which is to be exploited throughout the rest of the book
book is an improvement on the first edition. Its use as a self- – cladistics. Few of us can be unaware of the impact of the
tutor would have been enhanced by providing solutions to the cladistic method, as a means of focusing (with perhaps unnat-
maps. ural clarity) on features (anatomical characters for the most
The new edition of Geological structures and maps should part) which can be interpreted as indicating the degree of rela-
reliably serve another generation of geology students through tionship between different taxa, and the algorithms (notably
the next decade. We can only hope that map interpretation is still PAUP and Hennig86) which can be used to analyse patterns of
valued enough then to warrant a third edition. relationship based on tables of such characters (as binary terms)
Nigel Woodcock for groups of taxa.
Parts II & III of the book exploit this method to the full; the
authors describe the range and variety of dinosaurs known using
cladistic analysis as the organizing principle. As a means of pro-
viding a clear, analytical approach to the Dinosauria, this works
FASTOVSKY, D. E. & WEISHAMPEL, D. B. 1996. The Evolution extremely well; it allows for focused discussion of alternate
and Extinction of the Dinosaurs. xviii + 461 pp. patterns of relationship, and some of the assumptions which
Cambridge, New York, Port Chester, Melbourne, Sydney: underlie opposing points of view, and gives a structure to the
Cambridge University Press. Price £29.95, US $44.95 discussion which will be of enormous benefit to the undergradu-
(hard covers). ISBN 0 521 44496 9. ate reader and teacher alike (it must be remembered that the
majority of undergraduate course teachers at this level are not
Eleven years ago I published a book on the subject of dinosaurs. themselves dinosaur palaeontologists). The major groups of
It was written with the (I now realise naive) intention of halting Dinosauria: Ornithischia and Saurischia, are dealt with in two
the apparently exponential rise in number of poor-quality popu- major blocks (Parts II & III respectively). By default, but also
lar books on dinosaurs written by non-experts. The book was because it makes sense anatomically to go from less derived to
moderately serious in tone, well-illustrated and pretty much fac- progressively more derived archosaurs, it is traditional to con-
tually correct – a metaphorical stamp of the foot directed at the sider the Saurischia first in books of this type; quite why
journalistic hordes as if to say ‘don’t bother any more unless Fastovsky & Weishampel chose Ornithischia first is not clear,
you know more than this.’ Needless to say my effort was futile. unless it is to have the group (Saurischia) with living representa-
But to my immense surprise and partial embarrassment the tives (birds) near the end of the book? Each group is examined
book, though clearly not a textbook in an academic sense, went in detail to establish firstly its potted history, its broad pattern
on to become adopted, particularly in the US, as a standard of relationships and finally the ‘interesting bits’ – the palaeo-
course reference book for ‘non-major’ courses on dinosaurs. biology and ecological interpretations – in a repetitive sequence.
Such courses serve to provide a version of hopefully palatable The final part (IV) of the book comprises a series of four
and non-threatening science to university undergraduates from a chapters dealing with those subjects which are unavoidably
wide range of backgrounds acting both as general interest back- linked with dinosaurs: dinosaur physiology, dinosaurs in space
ground, and as a recruitment vehicle for some science options and time, and extinction scenarios.
later on in the undergraduate career. Additionally there is a colour plate section, showing a variety
In the intervening years dinosaur studies (both the method- of animals (mainly dinosaurs) across the Mesozoic Era in a vari-
ology and the material basis for study) have moved on apace, ety of ecological settings, copious well-organised indexes, and
and the need to replace this book has become pressing. In 1994 each chapter has some basic source references, which should
Spencer Lucas produced the rather immodestly titled help the more interested student to delve more deeply into the
Dinosaurs: the textbook, which though interesting in some ways literature if they so desire. Minor quibbles to mention are that as
fell far short of what was really needed in this subject area. This an English reader of the book I found the use of language rather
new book by Fastovsky & Weishampel is a far more seriously uncomfortable in an undergraduate textbook – veering between
crafted effort aimed directly at the course textbook market for overfamiliarity (a sort of gee-whizzery that I found irritating
US non-major undergraduates. It can perhaps with justification and seems to my mind to demean the subject unnecessarily –
be viewed as a comprehensible abridgement and updating of a but must be aimed at the American undergraduate audience) and
rather turgid volume: The Dinosauria (1990) edited by simple, well-expressed phraseology. I also did not like the style
Weishampel, Peter Dodson and Halszka Osmolska. of life restorations in either black & white or colour formats, but
The book is large in format and bulky in terms of the number that is clearly a matter of personal taste.
of pages (though some of the size accommodates the very wide In conclusion I think that this is an excellent book. It achieves
margins fashionable in US textbooks and presumably intended its aim with an intelligence and competence that cannot be
for scribbling notes on, and the copious illustrations) and there- doubted, and will be widely appreciated by undergraduate non-
fore appears to offer good value for money. As the preface majors and their teachers. Courses of this type are not taught in
points out this book is intended for university students, and is British universities, and dinosaurs occupy a very small niche in
structured so as to introduce (and use) dinosaurs as a vehicle Zoology and Geology degrees, so the book will undoubtedly
for the scientific investigation of the history of life on Earth and feature as background reading for some general vertebrate
is well, and clearly, illustrated throughout. I whole-heartedly evolution and palaeobiology courses for 1st and 2nd year
support this aim and encourage this approach myself – do they undergraduates rather than as an essential course book.
succeed? David Norman

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132 REVIEWS

OLLIER, C. & PAIN, C. 1996. Regolith, Soils and Landforms. environmental geoscience courses. Regolith–saprolite veneers
ix + 316 pp. Chichester, New York, Brisbane, Toronto, are a crucial feature of much of the developing world’s land-
Singapore: John Wiley & Sons. Price £65.00 (hard covers). surface and Ollier & Pain have done a considerable service in
ISBN 0 471 96121 3. producing a clear introduction to the topic.
Paul Wright
This book primarily describes southern hemisphere landscapes
and their soil and weathering product covers. This reviewer is a
rock-oriented geologist with experience of northern hemisphere
landscapes. However, in order to understand palaeosols in the LANZAVECCHIA, G., VALVASSORI, R. & CARNEVALI, M. D. C.
geological record, and especially in order properly to interpret (eds) 1995. Body Cavities: Function and Phylogeny.
ancient unconformities, we need to understand how deep weath- Collana U.Z.I. Selected Symosia and Monographs,
ering profiles develop. The importance of this book is that it Volume 8. 290 pp. Modena: Mucchi Editore. Price Lire
brings together a great deal of information about a key feature of 45000 (paperback). ISBN 88 7000 269 4.
the land surface in many parts of the world. The ignorance of BRIEDBACH, O. & KUTSCH, W. (eds) 1995. The Nervous Systems
many (most) geologists about deep weathering mantles is still a of Invertebrates: An Evolutionary and Comparative
problem as shown by a recent meeting this reviewer attended Approach, with a Coda written by T. H. Bullock. vii + 454
when a suggestion to include a lecture on this topic in an en- pp. Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhäuser. Price DM 198.00,
vironmental geology degree course was met with derision, as SFr 168.00, Ös 1544.40, US$ 132.00, £84.00, FF 740.00
apparently British environmental geologists will not work in (hard covers). ISBN 3 7643 5076 8.
southern hemisphere field areas. The book fills an important gap
and should be accessible to geology students let alone their lec- Metazoan phylogeny is back in fashion, and gratifyingly for
turers and course planners. palaeontologists the fossil record is once again being taken seri-
The book contains seventeen chapters covering themes such ously. Despite the inevitable mistakes and misinterpretations the
as weathering processes, climatic controls, landforms on fossils from soft-bodied faunas such as the Burgess Shale,
regolith, soils and duricrusts, regolith stratigraphy, tectonic Sirius Passet, and Chengjiang are providing a wealth of unex-
influences, mineral exploration, techniques, and regolith and the pected insights into the early diversification of animals during
‘geosystem’. the so-called Cambrian ‘explosion’. But if zoologists cannot
Key principles are explained simply and clearly, and the text afford to ignore the fossil record, so too should we remain
assumes that the reader has little specialist knowledge. At this informed about their activities and programmes. Of the two
introductory level the book is very good but more sophisticated books under review here, that edited by Giulio Lanzavecchia
aspects are not covered. This ‘overview’ style does create prob- and colleagues will probably prove to be the more relevant to
lems with over-simplification; for example, vertisols (p. 308) our enterprise. The concept of body cavities, famously the
are not all black! coelom, haemocoel and pseudocoel, have had a profound influ-
All the chapters benefit from the simple, clear prose. Terms ence on the perceived framework of metazoan evolution, per-
are clearly explained and the diagrams are uncluttered and haps most influentially via R. B. Clark’s book Dynamics in
informative. The strength of the book lies in the integration of a Metazoan Evolution, published in 1964. The configuration of
wide range of regolith-related topics making the book useful not the body cavities, together with their modes of derivation during
only to geomorphologists and pedologists but to field scientists embryology and larval development, have often been taken to
of many types including hydrogeologists, explorationists and to provide crucial clues in determining phylogenetic relationships.
those of us working on pre-Quaternary buried weathering fea- Now the emphasis has changed, with the suspicion that body
tures. In this last topic the chapter on the stratigraphy and age of cavities evolve as and when they are needed. In other words
the regolith (Chapter 13) is particularly useful. evolutionary convergence is to be expected, and the presence of
I found the chapter on duricrusts (Chapter 11) rather disap- a body cavity cannot be isolated from its functional context.
pointing in places, particularly because of the lack of informa- Here sixteen papers help to bring us up-to-date. One contribu-
tion on calcretes and by the absence of any discussion on the tion is little more than an abstract, and the remainder vary from
importance of groundwater processes in forming silcretes, cal- wide-ranging reviews to specialized and technical summaries.
cretes, ferricretes and gypcretes. The important work by Thiry In the first category, that of reviews, particularly helpful are the
and Milnes on silcretes is not referenced. I would have expected respective chapters by Willmer and Alexander. The former
to see more discussion on groundwater ferricretes, such as the addresses the phylogeny of body cavities in a contribution that
Australian examples documented by Fitzpatrick and co- radiates common sense. She concludes, reasonably enough, that
workers. The critically important studies by Arakel and co- convergence is the norm. McNeill Alexander considers the
workers on the hydrogeochemistry of groundwater calcretes functional aspects of body cavities in terms of their hydraulics
and dolocretes are not referenced. Dolocrete is not mentioned in and the properties of the enclosing walls. This writer brings his
the book, and, in Chapter 12 Wyoming has been moved into customary skill to bear on the relatively simple physics that
Canada (p. 189). accompany a deeper understanding of how body cavities actu-
The section on ‘Weathering in the past’ (Chapter 17) should ally function.
be revised to include the studies by Nesbitt, Young and co- One area of particular interest at the moment in metazoan
workers on modern and ancient saprolite geochemistry and phylogeny is the status of a number of so-called minor phyla.
recognition. It is disappointing not to see the detailed studies of Ghirardelli updates our knowledge of the arrow-worms
Thiry discussed, on Tertiary palaeo-weathering and climate (chaetognaths), emphasizing their unique anatomical features
change of the Paris Basin, which provides one of the clearest that continue to baffle systematists. Also puzzling are the so-
case-studies of ancient saprolite systems. called pseudocoelomates. Wallace and co-workers review their
Despite these omissions I welcome this book and its clear, understanding of pseudocoelomate phylogeny, but their conclu-
introductory style will make it invaluable for teaching. It sion (popularly shared) of a close connection between the
deserves to be available in libraries and to be required reading nematodes and nematomorphs is directly challenged in the pre-
by any student enrolled on one of the ever-growing number of ceding chapter, written by the senior editor and his colleagues.

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REVIEWS 133

There is, therefore, new information and some controversy, Scholtz). Neural arrangements may also provide valuable
but other papers cover more well-rehearsed areas. These include ammunition to evolutionary debates, or at least to one set of pro-
a succinct review by Salvini-Plawen & Bartolomaeus on the ponents. Thus, Whitington declares (p. 216) ‘It is therefore
situation in molluscs, and Minelli’s thoughts on body cavities, highly surprising that early axonogenesis in the centipede and
segmentation and homology. Both are valuable additions to this … other myriapods, shows few similarities to that seen in the
book. The historical component is not neglected. Simonetta & Insecta’. However, as he then discusses, the alternative view that
Insom touch on various aspects in their wide-ranging and some- insects are much closer to the crustaceans then they are to the
what eclectic survey of brachiopods, arthropods and chordates. myriapods, which had been the consensus for many years, is
In passing, perhaps one should also note that a postscript in the fast graining ground. The evolutionary emphasis in this book
paper by these authors, drawing attention to a supposed and the various references to the fossil record suggest that how-
example of a marine onychophoran, is now not only in serious ever inadequate our present understanding of the fossil record of
doubt but has implications of fraud (Jayaraman, 1989). The nervous systems may be, here too the ground is being laid for
historical emphasis is more fully expressed in Ghiara’s chapter future and fertile dialogues.
on the vertebrate gastrula, which is a comprehensive and schol- Simon Conway Morris
arly review. There is perhaps relatively little in this book that
is novel, but a fascinating exception to this is Bavestrello and References
co-workers’ description of the aquiferous system of sponges, CLARK, R. B. 1964. Dynamics in Metazoan Evolution. The Origin of the
the details of which were obtained by casting techniques using Coelom and Segments. Oxford: Clarendon.
plastics. Their conclusions are, in part, quite surprising: the JAYARAMAN, K. S. 1989. Indian zoologist suspected. Nature 342, 333.
canal system does not appear to be optimized for fluid flow. The
authors suggest this is a result of ‘competition’ for space within KRETZ, R. 1994. Metamorphic Crystallization. xiv + 507 pp.
the organism between the canal system and the complex skeletal Chichester, New York, Brisbane, Toronto, Singapore: John
framework. Here, surely, is an area of research that deserves Wiley & Sons. Price £22.50, US $36.50 (paperback).
more extensive investigation. ISBN 0 471 94214 6.
The second book under review here is less likely to be of
immediate interest to palaeontologists, although it is obviously This book presents an unusual approach to the study of meta-
an important contribution to neurobiology. Nervous tissue, morphic rocks, and is largely based on a major body of work by
while not unknown in the fossil record – interesting examples the author on metamorphic mineral textures and compositions.
are known from amber – is nevertheless very rare. Yet, we Kretz was a pioneer in the study of metamorphic textures,
should be informed about this area because of such topics as assimilating key concepts from the material science community
changes in vertebrate brain size (encephalization), and more long before they became wider currency among geologists, and
indirectly by the observation that trace fossils are a product of it was with much anticipation that I learned about this book. It is
behaviour and thereby are linked to neural programming. In this an abundantly illustrated paperback, which he has aimed at a
book there is strong emphasis on the evolutionary aspects of readership of senior undergraduates and graduate students. It is
neuronal systems. Thus we learn, for example, from divided into five massive chapters, with a set of appendices.
Grimmelikhuijzen & Westfall, that cnidarians (as Hydra) have a The whirlwind first chapter is devoted to building up a back-
much more complex neural arrangement, including a conspicu- ground in traditional metamorphic petrology. It begins with the
ous concentration of nervous tissue at the tentacular end of the historical background and moves rapidly into describing meta-
body, than the standard text-books would have us believe. Other morphic minerals, giving the briefest of introductions to crys-
supposedly primitive metazoans, such as the platyhelminthes talline microstructure. Isograds and metamorphic facies are
(Reuter & Gustafsson) and nematodes (Walthall), all have given a mention, as is the experimental determination of mineral
sophisticated nervous systems, and in the latter phylum there is stability. Progressive metamorphism is illustrated by the pro-
an intriguing segment-like arrangement. Amongst the inverte- gression from shale to granulite and the chapter ends with a
brates, however, nothing appears to match the remarkable com- brief mention of PTt paths. The level of this chapter is very
plexity of the cephalopod brain and associated nervous system, uneven. At the beginning it appears to be aimed at those with
and Budelmann is correct to emphasize the enormous potential very little background knowledge of geology, but half-way
for a deeper understanding of cephalopod nervous activity. through it is clearly aimed at a graduate level. Even in those
More than half the book is devoted to arthropod nervous sys- parts which seem suitable for a beginner, the treatment is too
tems, and several of the chapters have detailed discussions of superficial to be of much use except as a source of references.
homology and convergence. Some aspects of insect and spider Much of the recent and exciting developments in metamor-
nervous systems, for example, are remarkably stable and proba- phism is omitted or treated in a very cursory manner. The role of
bly have remained little changed for hundreds of millions of fluids in metamorphism, ultra-high pressure and temperature
years (for example, Meier & Reichert). In other cases, however, metamorphism are not adequately covered, for example. The
there is clear evidence of innovation and the development of chapter ends with a list of recent references (i.e. mid-1980s and
new structures. In the eusocial insects, for example, it is pos- later) that the reader is advised to consult, although little indica-
sible to identify not only learning but also memory. As tion is given as to their contents.
Strausfeld and co-workers stress, the insect brain may be tiny, The second chapter, on thermodynamics, is a classical and
but its neuronal density helps to explain an astonishing range of solid introduction. The basics of mineral thermodynamics are
abilities and behaviours. They emphasize recent studies of the presented along with the phase rule, and an exposition of the
so-called mushroom body, and place their discussion in a wide- thermodynamics of mineral mixtures and solid solutions. The
ranging evolutionary context. For the most part Strausfeld et al. properties of mixed volatiles are also briefly covered. The num-
are impressed by similarities between various arthropods (and bering system applied to the abundant equations in the text is
even annelids), whereas in the next chapter (Breidbach) the baffling, although I suspect they are numbered only when they
emphasis is more on convergence. In fact, paradoxically, in form part of a sequence deriving some important result. The
some decapods (e.g. brachyurans) evolutionary success is approach to thermodynamics is rather dry, with little indication
achieved by reduction and simplification (Sandeman & given as to how the theory may be applied to real rocks. For this,

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134 REVIEWS

the reader must wait until the following chapter. This chapter, the grain-scale processes, with a different perspective from the usual
longest in the book, covers mineral transformations, including one. As such this book would be a valuable addition to a library,
order–disorder transformations, solid solutions, mineral reac- although serious updating of material and subject matter is
tions with and without solid solution. The approach is very much needed before it can be used for teaching material.
case-study oriented, with application of the thermodynamic Marian Holness
background developed in the preceding chapter to specific geo-
chemical systems. The only problem is that the published case
studies are all hopelessly out of date. Surely the more recent DALLMEYER, R. D., FRANKE, W. & WEBER, K. (eds) 1995. Pre-
work on the aragonite–calcite transition (for example) should Permian Geology of Central and Eastern Europe. xvi + 604
have been mentioned here? The discussion of the pp. Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, London, Paris, Tokyo,
Schreinemakers method is excellent, although it is hidden away Hong Kong: Springer-Verlag. Price DM 498.00, SFr
in a section on phase equilibria in the MgO–SiO2–H2O system. 3635.40, SFr 469.00 (hard covers). ISBN 3 540 55472 6.
There is a large section covering element partitioning between
minerals, reflecting Kretz’s own contribution to this field, but Pre-Permian Geology of Central and Eastern Europe is
again the examples used to illustrate this are all rather out of date. designed to present the current state-of-the-art on this subject
The fourth chapter, on chemical kinetics, covers rates of reac- and represents the continuation of a series of comparable treat-
tion, solid-state diffusion, and crystal nucleation and growth, ments of regional geology in other areas, all related to the
with a final part linking together the previous sections on nucle- International Geological Correlation Program 233 ‘Terranes in
ation and growth rate in a study of metamorphic texture develop- the Circum-Atlantic Paleozoic Orogens’. In the preface, the edi-
ment. In the final chapter, Kretz shows the kind of information tors state that this book presents a ‘comprehensive view of our
on metamorphic processes that can be obtained from an exami- present understanding of the tectonothermal and stratigraphic
nation of granular microstructures. He covers reaction mecha- evolution of the Central European orogens’, resulting from a
nisms, corona microstructures, exsolution textures and kinetics, ‘first opportunity for completely open scientific exchange fol-
crystal shape and its control by interfacial energies, grain coars- lowing the recent political reformations in central Europe’.
ening, metamorphic differentiation, and metasomatism. The Eighty-six scientists from different countries across central and
majority of the case studies are again Kretz’s own. Curiously, the eastern Europe provided a thorough compilation of this subject,
role of minimization of internal energies during equilibration of building on the early work published at the beginning of this
textures is only mentioned in the context of the Wulff plot, century and considering most recent work which was submitted
despite many recent developments. Similarly, recent advances in in 1995, all of which certainly assures the goals stated above.
the understanding of metamorphic differentiation in terms of The book is subdivided into eleven main chapters, with six of
self-organization are mentioned only briefly. This chapter on them being further subdivided. Following a brief introduction,
microstructures is perhaps where one would expect Kretz to have the geophysical perspective of this topic is presented in the sec-
the most authoritative voice, but his work is reported in the same ond chapter, considering results from a variety of geophysical
form in which it was initially published with no new insights or surveys completed in recent years. The following six chapters
perspectives or comparison with the work of other authors. are related to the main geotectonical units in central and eastern
On the whole, the book’s structure is unwieldy and the orga- Europe, the Rhenohercynian Foldbelt, the Mid-German
nization is very weak. I got the feeling that the book would have Crystalline High, the Saxothuringian Basin, the Western Sudetes
been easier to use, and material less difficult to find, if the sub- (Lugicum), the Moldanubian Region and the Moravo-Silesian
divisions had been smaller. The index gives only the broadest Zone. The similarly structured treatment of individual subjects
outline of the contents of each section, and it is a common fail- (stratigraphy, structure, igneous activity, metamorphic evolution
ing that the existing sections contain many other topics than just and metallogenesis) provides a most detailed assessment of the
that of the title. Important concepts, such as Gresen’s treatment available information on these subjects as well as a welcome
of metasomatism, the nature of interfacial energy, and way of direct comparison of these aspects in all different areas.
Schreinemakers’ rules, are incorporated into sections almost as An additional chapter presents data on the North Variscan
an after-thought instead of having a section of their own. The Foreland. The last two chapters discuss the palaeogeographic
sequence in which various topics appear is baffling. Frequently, and geodynamic evolution of central and eastern Europe.
concepts are used well before the definition occurs in the text This book provides a wealthy of information, either presented
(and some, such as Miller indices, are not defined at all). directly in the text itself or in the large number of references.
Interfacial energy (a prime control on metamorphic crystalliza- The text is supported by 233 well-prepared figures, frequently
tion) is a good example of this, being mentioned in the first full-page geological or structural maps. Earth scientists inter-
chapter, with a rigorous definition and description not material- ested in pre-Permian geology of central and eastern Europe will
izing until the final chapter. The style of writing and authority of certainly regard this is a repository of information and the
the text appears to be very uneven, with those passages concern- answer to whatever question might come up with regard to this
ing areas of the field in which Kretz himself has worked being subject. It is an outstanding contribution to the geology of cen-
the most readable. tral and eastern Europe, and individual authors and the editors
A major criticism of the book is that it is very out of date. The are to be congratulated for this.
case studies covered in detail generally date from the sixties and Harald Strauss
seventies. Later important work is mentioned at the end of each
section as a clutch of papers which the reader is invited to study.
Surely a textbook should provide the reader with an exposition HSÜ, K. J. 1995. The Geology of Switzerland. An Introduction to
of the latest important developments in the field instead of point- Tectonic Facies. xxv + 250 pp. Princeton: Princeton
ing the reader in the direction of a few papers without any other University Press. Price £40.00, US $55.00 (hard covers).
guidelines? However, despite its drawbacks, the book presents a ISBN 0 691 08787 3.
refreshing look at metamorphism, and differs greatly from the
standard metamorphic textbook. Kretz gives us a unique and per- Previous books by Kenneth Hsü, covering the history of the Deep
sonal view of metamorphic crystallization with an emphasis on Sea Drilling Project and the ‘drying-up’ of the Mediterranean,

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REVIEWS 135

have been widely acclaimed for the manner in which they convey and places early work in a proper perspective. Furthermore, it
the excitement of earth science to a wide readership. The Geology reads well and, unlike many textbooks, is difficult to put down.
of Switzerland is also likely to have a similar impact. Hsü comes The book is well presented, with clear line drawings, of
from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zürich, which the cross-sections are particularly valuable. However,
and follows in the great tradition of Swiss Alpine geologists, such there are no photographs of the spectacular Alpine geology,
as Heim and Trümpy. Yet he brings to this account a vast range of which is perhaps a shame.
experience and ideas from America, China and elsewhere. In The Geology of Switzerland will be invaluable to all geolo-
essence, this book is a highly personalized and, some would say, gists interested in the development of mountain belts, and for
controversial account of the geological evolution of his adopted visitors to that country it is a must. All other earth scientists
homeland. But it goes beyond that; by introducing new concepts, would benefit from reading the philosophical parts of the book.
particularly that of tectonic facies, this book will have wide In conclusion, the author and the publishers are to be congratu-
applicability to other mountain belts. lated on producing such a fine, thought-provoking book, which I
The Geology of Switzerland is based on an introductory lec- believe is destined to become a classic.
ture course for students in Zürich, and as such it develops M. J. Hambrey
themes from first principles, as well as making incisive com-
ments about how geology as a science is tackled today. The
underlying concept in this book is that, although mountain RENAUT, R. W. & LAST, W. M. (eds) 1994. Sedimentology and
chains may each be different, they all have certain common Geochemistry of Modern and Ancient Saline Lakes. SEPM
characteristics or ‘body-plan’ (Bauplan in German). Thus mod- Special Publication no. 50. x + 334 pp. Tulsa: SEPM
els developed for the best-studied mountain range in the world, (Society for Sedimentary Geology). Price US $90.00
the Alps, can be applied to other ranges, and this is demon- (members US $65.00); hard covers. ISBN 1 56576 014 X.
strated within the book.
Because the book assumes that some students will have little Although among the very first lakes to be subjected to detailed
knowledge of geology, some background to historical geology, scientific study, saline lakes have tended to be rather neglected
sedimentary facies, and to the development of stratigraphy is by researchers in favour of their freshwater counterparts. This
given in Chapter 1. Using the Jura Mountains as the area to volume, arising from the conference held in Saskatoon, Canada,
demonstrate these ideas, Hsü entertainingly discusses the roles provides a much needed counterbalance. The editors have
played by early geologists like Steno, Hutton, Smith and selected 22 of the papers presented, arranging them in four sec-
Werner. In Chapter 2 the author focuses on the Cenozoic record tions addressing Modern, Quaternary, Ancient Salt Lakes, and
of the Swiss Midland. Emphasis is given to the development of Ancient Salt Lake/Marine systems, introduced with a brief
the Ice Age Theory, in which Swiss scientists like Agassiz overview chapter documenting the rise of interest in geological
played a key role in convincing geologists in other countries, limnology. Four papers address topics from different parts of
like Britain and America, that ice covered large parts of the Africa; three are from Australia, seven from North America, and
Earth. The Tertiary molasse deposits which underlie the the European lakes are represented by no less than seven studies
Quaternary glacial sediments are next described, with reference of ancient and modern examples in Spain.
to modern Himalayan fluvial systems. Only a flavour of the range of topics addressed in such a
The bulk of the volume is an account of the geology of the diverse collection of papers can be given in a brief review. The
Swiss Alps, presented in the context of plate tectonic theory. modern systems studies include reviews of brine geochemistry
Fascinating insight is given to the development of both early and processes that control water composition variations in the
and modern ideas concerning the evolution of the Alps. The lakes on short and long time scales. Problems of organic matter
author takes an integrated approach in avoiding the usual com- preservation, degradation and sulphate reduction are addressed
partmentalization of structural geology and stratigraphy. He as precursors to detailed examinations of solute fluxes and
develops the concept of tectonic facies, where each facies ‘is solute budgets. Evaporating ponds provide controls for model-
characterized not only by its style of deformation, but also by its ling studies of precipitation and compositional variations in the
sedimentary association, and its palaeogeographic position in waters of ephemeral surface lakes, and two papers address the
the framework of plate tectonics’. After a general introduction sedimentary structures and associated crusts which develop in
(Chapter 3), the discussion of these facies constitutes Chapters playa lakes.
4–11, embracing especially Helvetic stratigraphy, the Flysch, Quaternary lake studies, principally using analysis of core
Prealpine Klippes, Pennine core nappes, the Bünderschiefer, materials, provide the opportunity to relate temporal variability
ophiolites, Pennine deformation history and Austroalpine to changing climatic conditions. Aspects such as magnetic sus-
nappes. ceptibility, mineralogical changes (including clay mineral com-
The last four chapters of the book expound at a more ponents) and microbiological components provide central
advanced level the tectonic facies concept. These ideas are topics for separate papers and serve to highlight the many fac-
applied to other classic mountain belts, namely the tors which contribute to lacustrine sedimentation. Many of the
Appalachians, the Caledonides and the American Cordillera, same techniques are applied to the ancient deposits, reported
while a full chapter is devoted to the geology of China. Many of principally from Spain, but also including work on the Green
the ideas are still to be tested, and here Hsü offers a challenge to River Formation of Wyoming and Jurassic graben-fill sediments
the geological community to rethink their ideas. The book ends of the Hartford Basin of New England. The remarkable
with a discussion of ‘theoretical geology’, and the ‘stamp- glauberite-rich Spanish deposits gave rise to several of the
collector mentality’ of many geologists, not least of those jour- papers in the volume. The problems of distinguishing marine
nal editors and referees who seem incapable of accepting new sediments from those of saline lakes has long been recognized,
ideas unless backed by large bodies of data. Much of this will and in the three papers devoted to the topic both organic geo-
ring true for many readers of Hsü’s book! Sadly, the author feels chemistry and isotopic and fluid inclusion data are used to aid
that he is philosophically out of touch with modern develop- differentiation between deposits of the two modes of origin.
ments in geology. This is a great pity, as here we have a marvel- Using uniformitarian principles the reviewer is certain that
lous ‘ideas’ book which, in addition, is full of fascinating facts this volume will be used greatly in the future as a source of

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136 REVIEWS

reference material, for he has experienced difficulty in recover- Ameen’s Fractography comprises eight specifically fracto-
ing it from graduate and undergraduate students during the past graphic articles and three on ‘Miscellaneous studies of frac-
year. The work is essentially accessible, the papers are very tures’. Although the latter are worthwhile contributions it is
‘readable’, well illustrated with excellent photographs and clear difficult to see why they were included, other than having been
line diagrams, and all have valuable scientific messages to con- among the papers delivered at the Geological Society of
vey. It is a must for any geological reference library as there is London’s 1993 meeting from which this volume arose. The edi-
no equivalent cover currently available. For the academic it tor rationalizes their inclusion by stating that they ‘… have sig-
provides an ideal collection of papers to stimulate student semi- nificant implications for fracture mechanics, the main objective
nars or discussion groups. A most welcome addition to the of fractography’ – a true statement but one that could be applied
geological literature. to most papers on natural fractures.
John McManus In the Introduction Ameen explains the historical context of
the subject, which he defines (p. 3) as ‘all aspects of fracture
surface morphology’. This definition embraces a wider range of
VINER, D. 1992. The Iona Marble Quarry, 2nd ed. 24 pp. Iona, phenomena than many of his authors are prepared to address.
Inverness: The New Iona Press. Price £3.95 (paperback). They mainly concentrate on structures such as hackle (plumose)
ISBN 0 9516283 2 1. marks and hesitation lines (rib marks) on joint planes.
FAITHFULL, J. 1995. The Ross of Mull Granite Quarries. 56 pp. Following the Introduction the two succeeding papers focus on
Iona, Inverness: The New Iona Press. Price £5.95 (paper- minutiae of the recording and processing of fractographic data.
back). ISBN 0 9516283 6 4. It might have been better to have started the main body of the
book with a thorough overview of the subject so that the reader
These booklets from the New Iona Press describe two rather dif- could appreciate why some of the detail discussed in these
ferent quarrying operations in a celebrated Scottish setting. The papers is potentially valuable.
Iona Marble Quarry, worked spasmodically from mediaeval The next and excellent paper is by Peter & Elfriede Bankwitz
times for ornamental stone, was last operated just before the who demonstrate how fractographic markings visible on core
1914–18 War. Hidden in a steep and secluded cleft near the disking surfaces obtained during superdeep drilling at
southernmost tip of the island, virtually all of its Edwardian Windischeschenbach in Bavaria can be used to determine the
machinery remains rusting amongst a tumble of greenish orientations of the principal horizontal axes of the contempo-
serpentine-streaked marble blocks. David Viner’s little book rary stress field. Probably the two names most associated with
briefly describes the operating history and gives an account of geological fractography are Byron Kulander and Stuart Dean.
the surviving machinery, its use and plans for preservation. Their authoritative article, the fourth in the book, should be read
Granite quarrying on the immediate mainland was on a much first; it is the closest approach to a review, and it also includes
grander scale and although intermittent – ceasing altogether the results of some simple but revealing experiments. Ameen
between the 1920s and 1986 – was clearly often rather prof- then contributes two of the three papers on field aspects of frac-
itable. Ross of Mull granite, prized especially for lighthouse, tography, markings on joint planes in the Permo-Triassic rocks
harbour and bridge construction as well as for ornamental work, of west Cumbria being appraised before those in the Chalk of
was exported during the 19th Century in large quantities, often Kent. A commendable attribute of both articles, which together
as surprisingly large blocks considering the rather primitive occupy 33% of the book, is that Ameen sets his fractographic
techniques then at the quarrymen’s disposal. Joan Faithfull’s observations in the context of the structual histories of the areas.
book, which often presumes a rather greater topographical The surprise about Ameen’s paper on markings on joint planes
familiarity than the average reader will have, ranges over the in the Chalk is that he found any; Alexandra Goodwin, who dis-
various quarrying sites, their history of working and the destina- cusses joints in the Chalk of eastern England, reports in her
tion and present whereabouts of the shipped material. article that she did not see them. John Roberts, in a clear
These books, with but sketchy geological detail, are for the account of some previously undescribed hackle marks in
general reader and should interest most visitors to the area. They Liassic rocks in the Vale of Glamorgan, concludes that confin-
will also be read with enjoyment by any lover of stone returning ing pressures were low during jointing in that part of the Bristol
to the Hebrides in his mind’s eye. Channel basin.
G. A. Chinner John Cosgrove’s well written but short paper on hydraulic
fracturing in unlithified sediments will interest many structural
geologists but it does not fit comfortably in this book. The same
is true of Goodwin’s thought-provoking article on fractures in
eastern England, within which she argues that conjugate hybrid
AMEEN, M. S. (ed.) 1995. Fractography: Fracture Topography joints occur in the weaker Chalks of Norfolk but are replaced by
as a Tool in Fracture Mechanics and Stress Analysis. a single set of extension fractures in the Chalk of Humberside.
Geological Society Special Publication no. 92. v + 240 pp. The final non-fractographic paper by Michael Gross and co-
London, Bath: Geological Society of London. Price workers concludes that in the Monterey Formation of California
£56.00, US $93.00; members’ price £29.00, US $48.00; there are factors in addition to bed thickness that control joint
hard covers. ISBN 1 897799 32 2. spacing.
As is customary with Special Publications of Geological
The editor of this book has thoughtfully provided a sub-title in Society, the standard of presentation of this volume is high
case there are potential readers who do not understand the word although there is an inflated number of half-tones. If the inter-
fractography. The subject is, however, not entirely arcane, even pretation of fractures in rocks is of concern to you I recommend
to the general public. For instance, I recall hearing some years buying the book, despite its shortcomings. We are likely to hear
ago fractography being discussed by Alastair Cook in his much more about fractography in the future; perhaps by then
‘Letter from America’ on BBC Radio. Fractographers are, experts will have decided on a common nomenclature, a
apparently, key players in attempts to upgrade the ruptured requirement the editor picks out as a future goal.
sewers beneath New York. P. L. Hancock

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REVIEWS 137

REUTTER, K.-J., SCHEUBER, E. & WIGGER, P. J. (eds) 1994. minerals in the surface environment. It sets out clearly the fun-
Tectonics of the Southern Central Andes. Structure and damentals of clay chemistry, formation and behaviour in soils
Evolution of an Active Continental Margin. viii + 333 pp. + and sediments, during diagenesis and hydrothermal alteration,
maps in boxed set. Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, London, in preparation for a second volume which will discuss more
Paris, Tokyo, Hong Kong: Springer-Verlag. Price DM fully the interaction of clays in different environmental systems.
298.00, Ös 2324.40, SFr 293.00 (hard covers). ISBN 3 540 The book consists of seven chapters, each written by a single or
55232 4. combination of five authors (B. Velde, D. Righi, A. Meunier,
S. Hillier, A. Inoue).
The central Andes (c. 20–26°S) of South America have long Chapter 1 (Velde) is a brief introduction to the geology of
captured the interest of geologists and geophysicists, attracted clays and emphasizes the important and topical issues that can
by the plethora of volcanic and earthquake activity located at be addressed through the study of clay minerals. In Chapter 2
what has become the type example of an active continental mar- (Velde), the physical and chemical properties of clays are dis-
gin. While many scientists from around the world have worked cussed in some detail. Crystallographic structure, chemical sub-
in this region, one group in particular – geoscientists from the stitutions and mineral families are explained with admirable
Freie Unversität and the Technische Universität, Berlin, in col- clarity, and the chapter also contains invaluable introductory
laboration with South American colleagues – has made a sig- paragraphs and summaries of its different sections.
nificant contribution to our understanding of the geodynamics Chapter 3 (Righi & Meunier) concerns the origin of clays by
of this important region of the earth’s crust. Much of this book is rock weathering and soil formation, and is by far the densest
a review of the excellent and timely research undertaken by chapter in the book. A section on soil formation in relation to
German workers at both universities since 1982. In particular, it climate, rock type, biology, age and topography is well pre-
confirms the importance of interdisciplinary (geological, petro- sented, and is followed by a summary of soil types, and discus-
logical, geochemical and geophysical) research in tackling the sion of the properties of weathered rock and soils. Next, the
complex geodynamic processes that occur in orogenic belts. phase relations in rock weathering systems are considered and
The book is divided into two main sections, one dealing with the remainder of the chapter (a further ~60 pages!) is a detailed
the structure and state of the lithosphere, and the other the geo- study of clay genesis by weathering of different parent rocks
logical evolution of the region. In all, fifty-six contributors pro- requiring a fairly advanced background in chemistry for ready
vide between them 23 papers that cover topics ranging from comprehension. Unfortunately the section summaries are less
large-scale lithospheric structure to the origin of nitrate deposits. skilful than those of Chapter 2.
Much of the section on the structure and state of the lithosphere Chapter 4 (Hillier), on the erosion, sedimentation and sedi-
deals with geophysical aspects of the Andean lithosphere, with mentary origin of clays, appears as something of a light relief
particular emphasis on seismic refraction, gravity, heat flow and after Chapter 3 and is very well written, but is rather disappoint-
conductivity measurements and their interpretation. Other aspects ingly insubstantial in places. However, it provides tantalizing
such as the geochemical evolution of the region are also covered hints at detail that may come to light in the second volume, and
in some detail. The section on geological evolution is broader a fairly comprehensive summary of sources of further informa-
based, and brings in comparisons with other regions of the Andes tion on the topics outlined. These include global fluxes and
further south in Southern Chile and Argentina. The isotopic com- transport by rivers, oceans, wind and ice, modification during
position of the Andean (Gondwana) basement is also considered, transport, settling and flocculation. The section on authigenic
as are the geological factors governing metallogeny. formation of clay minerals is rather more detailed, but the final
The fact that so much geophysical and geochemical informa- section dealing with environmental interpretation of clay miner-
tion from a slice of the Andes is gathered together in one place als is very thin indeed.
makes this book a worthy contribution to the literature. But the Chapter 5 (Velde) deals with various aspects of compaction
inclusion of three maps of the central Andean segment, one geo- and diagenesis, and is once again extremely readable and acces-
logical (1:1 000 000) and the other two geophysical, summariz- sible but lacks depth. The main topics discussed include porosity,
ing the results of gravity surveys (Bouguer anomaly and isostatic and the kinetics of clay transformations, mineral reactions dur-
anomaly) by the German group between 20 and 26°S and ing burial diagenesis, and sequential changes with burial depth.
63–71°30´W makes it an invaluable, state-of-the-art reference It is surprising that there is no mention or discussion of the role
work. played by clays in overpressuring and undercompaction.
In summary, the book contains a wealth of information on an Hydrothermal alteration by veins is considered in a succinct
exciting area of the earth’s crust. It is essential reading for Chapter 6 (Meunier), detailing the principal kinds of veins
researchers in the Andes (and other Cordilleran mountain belts), encountered and the physico-chemical mechanisms of alter-
and a useful reference book for the more general reader with an ation in hydrothermal systems. This leads into the final Chapter
orogenic–tectonic bent. It also shows what can be achieved 7 (Inoue), on the wider issue of clay mineral formation in
through concerted, long-term funding of geological research hydrothermal environments, which include porphyry copper
in a logistically difficult area, and stands as testimony to the deposits, epithermal ores, geothermal systems associated with
generosity and foresight of the German Research Council. recent volcanism, and hydrothermal activity at sea-floor spread-
Nick Petford ing centres. The chapter presents case studies of different types
of alteration, and discusses detailed mineralogy of selected clay
mineral types.
VELDE, B. (ed.) 1995. Origin and Mineralogy of Clays. Clays A clear and comprehensive table of contents, together with a
and the Environment. xv + 334 pp. Berlin, Heidelberg, subject index mean that the book will be accessible not only to
New York, Barcelona, Budapest, Hong Kong, London, readers-in-depth, but also to those dipping in for specific infor-
Milan, Paris, Tokyo: Springer-Verlag. Price DM 138.00, mation. Chapters each have their own bibliography, while
Ös 1007.40, SFr 132.50 hard covers). ISBN 3 540 58012 3. Chapters 2 and 5 present a guided reading list which is particu-
larly helpful to newcomers to the subject.
Origin and Mineralogy of Clays is the first of two volumes There is much information in this book useful for undergrad-
which aim to provide an understanding of the role of clay uate and post-graduate teaching as well as for scientists who are

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138 REVIEWS

interested in the relevance and utility of clay mineralogy to their high quality paper, it feels good, and its copious half-tones stand
own sphere of interest. However the volume is not suitable for out well from the pages. It is a valuable source of geological
an undergraduate textbook as the subject coverage is too uneven information about the planets, presented in an authoritative but
in extent, depth and style. The text contains an unacceptable eminently readable style, with due emphasis on the geomor-
number of typographic errors. phology of landforms on the Sun’s diverse family of planets and
B. Manighetti & C. V. Jeans their moons.
The first edition preceeded Voyager 2’s successful fly-bys of
the Uranian and Neptunian systems, and the hugely productive
JACKSON, D. I., JACKSON, A. A., EVANS, D., WINGFIELD, R. T. R., Magellan radar mapping mission to Venus. The new edition
BARNES, R. P. & ARTHUR, M. J. 1995. The Geology of the enables the author to bring his treatment up to date, albeit only
Irish Sea. United Kingdom Offshore Regional Report in so far as this is possible in the light of the rapidly-developing
Series. x + 123 pp. Keyworth: British Geological Survey. field of planetary geology, and to present his readers with a
Price £30.00 (paperback). ISBN 0 11 884507 1. selection of the fascinating images collected by more recent
spacecraft.
The British Regional Geology series has, for more than sixty The layout of the new edition is much the same as the first,
years, provided readable yet authoritative guides to the onshore indeed, much of the text is virtually identical. Introductory
geology of the United Kingdom. The Offshore Regional chapters deal with the geological exploration of the Sun’s
Reports, the first of which appeared a mere six years ago, are an family, and planetary geomorphology. These are followed by
attempt to emulate the success of the onshore series. Twelve chapters dealing with individual planets and their satellites. It is
reports, most of which are now published, cover the United the latter part of the book which shows the most revision, there
Kingdom continental shelf. They are designed to complement being two additional chapters, covering the planetary systems of
the 1:250 000 scale map series covering the same area. This off- Uranus and Neptune respectively. Readers familiar with the first
shore mapping and documentation program was largely funded edition will notice a different map of the Jovian moon, Io, as
by the UK Department of Energy, and is as important a part of well as images of the asteroids Ida and Gaspra.
the national information base as the onshore surveys. Magellan, after its four 243-day mapping cycles, has necessi-
The Offshore Reports follow a traditional structure for describ- tated a complete rethink about Venus and its geological develop-
ing regional geology, inherited from the Geological Survey mem- ment. Greeley has had to rewrite his chapter on this planet and
oirs, but adapted to the offshore context. Successive chapters includes several excellent Magellan images of impact craters,
cover crustal structure, pre-Carboniferous, post-Caledonian impact haloes, ejecta flows, volcanic features and aeolian land-
structure, Carboniferous, Permian, Triassic, Jurassic and forms. Interestingly, the new chapter is of approximately the
Cretaceous, Paleogene and Neogene, Pleistocene and Holocene, same length as its precursor which, to my mind, means that the
and economic geology. The A4 format is more generous than the author may have missed an opportunity to expand on the geo-
onshore regional guides and even recent memoirs, and is well logical development of this complex planet. However, to be fair,
suited to the large maps and stratigraphic diagrams that comprise at the time of writing much of this data had hardly been
much of the graphic material for the report. Colour is used ubiqui- analysed by the various groups working in this field. More
tously for these diagrams, but in a restrained way which is highly recent research has defined several distinct kinds of highland
effective in enhancing their scientific clarity and artistic appeal. region, a planet-wide development of ridge belts and tectoni-
The only quibble with the otherwise excellent design might be cally-deformed zones, but little direct evidence for a segmented
with the twenty or so figures set in landscape format. With better lithosphere. The ubiquitous coronae are a manifestation of
liaison between geologists and draftsperson, most of these might plume activity, which appears to be the principal mode of heat
have been designed in a more convenient portrait orientation. loss on Venus.
Maybe it is coincidental that one of the last of the Offshore The additional material related to outer planet moons
Reports to be published should be the one covering the smallest describes the complex geology attached to those moons which,
area, yet with the largest proportion of bordering land geology. not many years ago, were simply points of light in astronomers’
Certainly the report provides a valuable connective synthesis of telescopes. Thus the highly fractured crusts of Europa and
the geology of Northern Ireland, southwest Scotland, northwest Ganymede are amply illustrated and described, a modest
England, north Wales and the Isle of Man, and will be of interest amount of space being allotted to the topic of cryovolcanism.
to as many ‘onshore’ as ‘offshore’ geologists. Particular high- Resurfacing of these cold rock-and-ice worlds has been wide-
lights are the story of Carboniferous to Triassic basin formation spread – Voyager showed this – while geyser-like eruptions
and the splendid record of Quaternary events. appear to have been common on Neptune’s moon, Triton, which
The Geology of the Irish Sea provides a reliable summary of has a very interesting geology. Greeley introduces the reader to
the region and, with its extensive and up-to-date reference list, a these new topics in the later chapters and includes several of the
valuable guide to the more detailed literature. It and the rest of excellent airbrush maps drawn up by the USGS at Flagstaff.
the Offshore Report series should be in any library aspiring to Planetary Landscapes is an excellent book and should be
cover UK geology. Their price may make them less attractive to on the shelves of anyone with more than a passing interest in
individual purchasers than the onshore Regional Geology planetary geology.
guides, but may their utility be no less enduring. Peter Cattermole
Nigel Woodcock

BLATT, H. & TRACY, R. J. 1996. Petrology. Igneous,


GREELEY, R. 1994. Planetary Landscapes, 2nd ed. xiv + 285 pp. Sedimentary, and Metamorphic, 2nd ed. xix + 529 pp. New
New York, London: Chapman & Hall. Price £79.50 (hard York, Basingstoke: W. H. Freeman & Co. Price £34.95, US
covers). ISBN 0 412 05431 0. $64.95 (hard covers). ISBN 0 7167 2438 3.

The second edition of this highly valued book more than lives Like the child of distinguished parents who chooses to follow
up to the solid reputation built up by its predecessor. Printed on the same career path, the second edition of a long-established

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REVIEWS 139

text is inevitably measured against two yardsticks: the contem- occasionally black-and-white) microscopic images of thin sec-
porary marketplace, and the legacy of its forebears. In this case, tions that apparently show cathodoluminescence or interference
the burden of expectation is heightened still further by the colours. An additional, and unforgiveable, sin is that at least
pronouncements on the back cover that this volume is ‘contem- several figures are used more than once (see, for example, fig-
porary’ … ‘cutting edge’ … ‘a current account of a changing ures 1.7 and 10.2; 2.10 and 10.10). As Wilde might have said, to
field’. Sadly, while elements of this might apply to individual offer one piece of evidence that a book had been imperfectly
chapters, only a cave-dwelling petrologist would consider these cobbled together could be deemed a misfortune …
to be appropriate accolades for the whole text. The overall impression, then, is that this is not quite the
Petrology is the second edition of a text by Ehlers & Blatt, sprightly, modern child that you were expecting, but instead the
first published in 1982. Its aim is comprehensive: to provide an ageing adult itself – the shoes and haircut might be new, but
introductory-level text that describes igneous, sedimentary and through its straining girth and lined visage, the incompletely
metamorphic rocks and their significance. It has clearly been rewritten passage of time is revealed. With a little more attention
designed as teaching text – with comfortably sized chapters, to detail it might have lived up to its billing. As it is, it offers
each concluded with study exercises (a set of more or less con- little other than breadth to distinguish it from the crowd.
trived or leading questions, that are exclusively discursive) and David Pyle
a short list of references to the literature, or to additional texts.
The content is fairly well balanced, with ten igneous chapters
(from ‘chemistry and classification’ to ‘origins’ and ‘evolu- BENNETT, M. R., DOYLE, P., LARWOOD, J. G. & PROSSER, C. D.
tion’), seven sedimentary chapters (divided principally by rock (eds) 1996. Geology on your Doorstep. The Role of Urban
type) and seven metamorphic chapters. Two appendices, Geology in Earth Heritage Conservation. x + 270 pp.
encompassing that old favourite the CIPW norm, and rock ther- London, Bath: Geological Society of London. Price
mometry and barometry, round off the text together with a short £30.00, US $64.00 (members’ price £19.00, US $32.00);
glossary and index. In general the order is obvious, and in part paperback. ISBN 1 897799 54 3.
sequential. The design and form would be recognizable to any-
one who has scanned the geology shelves of a bookstore Geologists can reflect enviously on some Victorian values. If
recently – petrology is, it seems, primarily about grouping and only geology was regarded by our own society as one of the four
describing rocks; about collecting and gathering information. ‘greater sciences’ – along with astronomy, geometry and chem-
Nothing out of the ordinary here then, except that this conven- istry – honoured on the Albert Memorial in London. Instead,
tional approach seems to be a terrifically inefficient way to current public awareness of geology is low, certainly in the
approach the study of rocks. Surely petrologists should be aim- United Kingdom. This ignorance marks not just a missed oppor-
ing to capture their audience through an understanding of tunity for enriching people’s perception of their planet. It also
principles and processes first, with application to Nature’s rich results in a decreased interest in the geology taught in schools,
diversity second? When taught the other way around there is a more difficulty for university geology departments in recruiting
danger that students will feel as though they are being led blink- motivated and well-qualified students, and a smaller pool of out-
ered through an underground maze, before being given the tools standing geologists for eventual employers. All geologists
with which to explore and find their own way around. should therefore be sympathetic to the efforts of the dedicated
So much for the structure; what of the content? The fifteen band of colleagues trying to revitalise public interest in our sub-
year gap between the two editions has witnessed some remark- ject. Many of the UK-based activists contribute to the timely
able advances in our understanding of the stories that rocks have and visionary Geology on your Doorstep.
to tell us about the workings of accessible portions of the earth, The central premise of this book is that our traditional edu-
and what they reveal about the deeper, impenetrable interior. It cational focus on the natural geology of rural areas is missing
is just a pity that this has only partially filtered through into the our main target – the 80 % of the UK population who live in
revision. A brief scan reveals that significant numbers of the ref- towns and cities. Yet these urban areas are pervaded by geologi-
erences, photographs, and line drawings have been inherited cal material, sometimes in natural or artificial exposures, often
from the original. This needn’t necessarily be too much of a hin- in museums and parks, and always in the built environment.
drance, but when a chapter on ‘origins of magmas by melting’ Geology on your Doorstep aims to document this wealth of edu-
has only a single reference younger than 1980 – recalling that cational opportunity, to stimulate interest in urban geology, and
the target audience of the next few generations of first-year to increase awareness of its importance in raising the public pro-
geology students will almost all have been born since 1978 or file of Earth Sciences. The book does this admirably.
1979 – there is little to suggest that substantial revision has A list of the book’s sections demonstrates the scope and
taken place between editions. Perhaps this is a little unfair. After vision of the volume: the rationale and scope of earth heritage
all the sedimentary petrology chapters are crisp, readable and up conservation in urban areas, building stones, parks and green
to date. But then so they should be, as this section is a barely, if spaces, museums, urban geology and civil engineering, the role
at all, disguised distillation of Blatt’s own Sedimentary of the local authority, urban geology and education, increasing
Petrology (second edition, 1992; also published by Freeman). public awareness and involvement, creating an urban geological
The metamorphic petrology chapters are generally of a high resource. Under these headings are 24 short, well-written
standard, though it is curious that the concepts of mineral reac- contributions, skilfully chosen to represent all facets of urban
tion, exchange and equilibrium only appear after the description geology. Readers new to this field may find some of the urban
of isograds and metamorphic facies. ‘outcrops’ extraordinary and amusing. Granites in gravestones,
To add further to these woes, the reader seeking the promised xenoliths in kerbstones, ballast walls and gastropod mileposts,
‘outstanding art program’ will find that, sadly, many of the unconformities in brickwork and bedding in ‘pulhamite’; the
photographs apparently suffered as a consequence of being car- examples are diverse and diverting. Purists may recoil at the
ried over from the earlier edition, since they are generally artificiality of this urban geological record. But they should
underexposed throughout. The absence of colour, although reflect that these are the rocks that most people actually see
obviously desirable to keep the costs down, isn’t helped by the from day to day, not the supposedly ‘proper’ outcrops of coast
inclusion of a surprising number of grey-scale (i.e. more than and country. Indeed there is some educational advantage in

https://doi.org/10.1017/S001675689730613X Published online by Cambridge University Press


140 REVIEWS

rocks, minerals and fossils being divorced from the complexi- each several hundred kilometres long: northern Victoria Land,
ties of their natural context. Properly described or signposted, southern Victoria Land, central Transantarctic Mountains,
these small chunks of geology can feed public awareness in Queen Maud and Horlick Mountains, Thiel Mountains and
digestible portions. When our town dweller meets more com- Pensacola Mountains. Each chapter begins with a useful
plex geology in books, on radio or television or ideally in the summary and is followed by a section on the chronology of
field, they will already have some useful vocabulary and con- exploration. The bulk of each chapter covers stratigraphy, age
cepts, and even some basic scientific curiosity and motivation. considerations, deformation and metamorphism, although in
This is the vision. some areas a number of discrete terranes need to be considered
Geology on your Doorstep deserves to be read by geology separately. Each chapter also has clear, well produced location
teachers at all levels, by urban planners, by amateur geology maps, so there is no danger of ‘getting lost’. The text concludes
groups, and by industry geologists. The last group might be with a synthesis of a region that has major uncertainties
excited enough to persuade their companies to facilitate or fund concerning stratigraphic correlation, but some similarities that
some of the excellent project ideas suggested in the book. The permit the outlining of a common tectonic history. However,
only obstacle to the book reaching this wide audience is its little attempt is made to link Antarctica to the other Gondwana
price. Members of the Geological Society of London can buy continents. A comprehensive index and reference list (with
Geology on your Doorstep at a realistic £19, but the full £38 is approximately 500 entries) makes this book a valuable resource
going to deter most personal purchasers. Hopefully, many for Antarctic geologists.
library copies will be bought and read, helping to establish The book is beautifully presented, with stunning black-and-
urban geology as an increasingly viable and vibrant teaching white photographs and clear line drawings. Errors are few,
resource for the future. though read Bowers Supergroup for Beacon Supergroup in
Nigel Woodcock Figure 2.16.
The author and publisher are to be congratulated on produc-
ing a volume that will appeal to all Antarctic geologists, as well
STUMP, E. 1995. The Ross Orogen of the Transantarctic as those interested in the late Proterozoic to early Phanerozoic
Mountains. xv + 284 pp. Cambridge, New York, Port phase of Earth’s history.
Chester, Melbourne, Sydney: Cambridge University Press. Michael Hambrey
Price £60.00, US $99.95 (hard covers). ISBN 0 521
43314 2.
HUMMEL, J. H. (ed.) 1996. The GIA Diamond Dictionary CD-
The Transantarctic Mountains are one of the world’s greatest ROM. For Windows 3.1 or higher and Windows ’95. Santa
mountain ranges, yet inevitably among the least known. They Monica: Gemological Institute of America. Price US
extend for some 3500 km and commonly rise to heights of more $49.95.
than 4000 m. They form the boundary between East Antarctica
with its huge volume of ice overlying Precambrian cratonic base- The Gemological Institute of America’s popular Diamond
ment, and West Antarctica with its smaller ice sheet overlying Dictionary is now available in electronic form. This CD-ROM
Phanerozoic accreted rocks, much of which are below sea level. is an expanded version of the third edition of the GIA’s
The Transantarctic Mountains differ from most major moun- Diamond Dictionary (see review in Geological Magazine 132,
tain ranges, which are the product of plate subduction or colli- 128–9, 1995). The electronic version offers a number of advan-
sion. Rather they are intracontinental and considered to represent tages to the book particularly in the area of cross-searching.
a rift shoulder, which has been uplifted at the boundary with the Dictionaries and encyclopedia seem ideally suited to this elec-
Ross Embayment. The mountains themselves are young, the tronic format and, if the price of this version of the diamond dic-
main phase of uplift taking place after 50 Ma, but they trend par- tionary is anything of a guide, it is cheaper to produce than
allel to the structural grain of the Neoproterozoic–early conventionally bound hard copies. The disc version runs on
Palaeozoic deformed rocks which form the Ross Orogen. These IBM PC-compatible multimedia-ready computers, under
rocks have been truncated by a mainly flat, erosional surface of Windows 3.1 or higher and Windows ’95. I am sure that this
regional extent, upon which lies the largely terrestrial Beacon electronic version will, like the hard-cover version, be of great
Supergroup of Devonian to Triassic age. use to those who need or want to know more about diamonds
This book, then, focuses on the pre-Devonian rocks that form and the diamond industry.
the Ross Orogen. It is a most welcome contribution from a geol- Allan Pring
ogist who has spent many seasons working through much of the
mountain range. Not only does the author provide a large body
of his own data, but also synthesizes much of the available liter- NEEV, D. & EMERY, K. O. 1995. The Destruction of Sodom,
ature, placing all this within an historical context, starting with Gomorrah, and Jericho. Geological, Climatological, and
the observations made during the polar journeys of the ‘Heroic Archaeological Background. xii + 175 pp. New York,
Era’ in the early years of this century. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Price £30.00 (hard
In essence, the history of the Ross Orogen begins in covers). ISBN 0 19 509094 2.
Neoproterozoic time with passive, continental margin sedimen-
tation, following the rifting of Laurentia away from Gondwana The Bible contains a remarkably long and rich history of the
(according to recent tectonic models). The passive margin was Middle East, extending back many thousands of years. Included
activated by compressional deformation and plutonism in late in that history are descriptions of climactic events such as the
Proterozoic time, and subsequently became involved in a full- destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and of the breaching of
scale orogenic cycle during the Cambrian period. The orogenic the walls of Jericho when the Israelites invaded Canaan. Many
belt was exhumed and cooled from Ordovician time onwards, attempts have been made over the past two thousand years to
eventually to be followed by deposition of the Beacon correlate some of these biblical records with specific geological
Supergroup. or environmental processes that are known to occur in this
The history of the Ross Orogen is treated in six segments, region or elsewhere. Neev & Emery have put together their con-

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REVIEWS 141

siderable and extensive knowledge of the geological and envi- The atlas commences in Part One with a brief history of
ronmental history of the Dead Sea region as background infor- hydrocarbon exploration in the province followed by a concise
mation that may help in understanding more about the fates of regional-scale structural and stratigraphic framework. The basic
Sodom, Gomorrah and Jericho. concepts and principles of seismic and sequence stratigraphy
Earthquakes and volcanic eruptions provide ample scope as are reviewed from a practical viewpoint in a clear, concise and
agents for catastrophic destruction, and there are plenty of both balanced manner and the inclusion of this review has the effect
in the Dead Sea region. However, if they are to be invoked of making the atlas self-contained. This section includes a gen-
to explain some of the specific biblical events, then it has to be eralized, conceptual summary of the South African basins
shown that they occurred in the right places and at the right which differs from the Exxon ‘slug’ in a number of respects, but
times. In the case of Sodom and Gomorrah, it is not at all certain also argues that the third-order sequences identified in the data
precisely where these cities were located. In the case of Jericho, correlate closely with those of the Exxon chart.
the site is well known but the dating of the Israelite invasion is Parts 2, 3 and 4 of the atlas deal with individual basins within
not. Neev & Emery discuss the various possibilities for both the province, the Pletmos, Bredasdorp and Orange basins
issues, and the evidence that might help resolve the uncertainties. respectively. Paired seismic profiles (uninterpreted/interpreted)
There have been considerable climatic changes in the Dead are presented, with the interpreted sections having a subdued
Sea region over the past 10 000 years and, since this has been a display of the basic data and outline well data tied in where
focus of much of Neev & Emery’s research, they discuss these available. This display technique works well and enables the
climatic changes at length. They point out that major cultural reader to evaluate the seismic pick aspect of the interpretation
changes and large-scale migrations of people may well have to the extent that on occasions one questions why a particular
happened as a response to local climatic changes. Some of the pick was made or why some ‘interesting’ reflectors were over-
abandonment levels observed archaeologically, for example, ridden. The quality of data reproduction is generally high, and
may be due to such climatic-induced migrations. Indeed, major some profiles from the Orange basin (e.g. Figure 140) are spec-
forceful ejections of the inhabitants of some areas may have tacular. The emphasis of the analysis is on the identification,
occurred as displaced people sought to re-establish themselves correlation and age determination of unconformity-bounded
in more favourable areas. So not all the abrupt changes in habi- sequences. The geometry of seismic intervals is used to iden-
tation found at a particular place are necessarily due to sudden tify the depositional systems and the portions of the relative sea
geological effects at that location: they may result from human level curve to which the depositional systems are felt to belong
agency, perhaps driven, interestingly enough, by longer term (systems tracts). Seismic facies are used to a limited extent, for
climatic changes elsewhere. example in the identification of seismically mappable slump
This is not a ‘popular’ book, nor is it light reading. A lot of it is deposits. Well log data (gamma ray, sonic, density and dipme-
technical detail of geological and environmental data from the ter) and biostratigraphic data for selected wells are also
Dead Sea region, and speculation concerning the meaning of reported, allowing the reader to judge the ways in which these
biblical and other texts and the physical locations of ancient data have been incorporated into the analysis. A profusion of
cities. However, the book does contain a distillation of more than abbreviations is used on the interpreted figures and related cap-
35 years of research by both authors in the Dead Sea region. tions and the reader is well advised to make a loose copy of
Their thoughts on the fates of Sodom, Gomorrah and Jericho, Figure 12 which serves as a key to the abbreviations. Rift-
and of the possible influence of geological factors, provide use- related seismic packages feature prominently in many of the
ful source material for anyone interested in understanding more profiles, but the details of these packages are not analysed and
about these events. the emphasis is clearly on post-rift strata above the rift-to-drift
R. S. White unconformities.
In a depositional sense the atlas is mainly concerned with slope
and shelf-edge deltaic depositional systems that are represented
BROWN, L. F., JR., BENSON, J. M., BRINK, G. J., DOHERTY, S., by complexes of dipping, clinoform reflectors and deep basin sys-
JOLLANDS, A., JUNGSLAGER, E. H. A., KEENAN, J. H. G., tems including interpreted lowstand turbidite fans. Some profiles
MUNTINGH, A. & VAN WYK, N. J. S. 1995. Sequence include data from up-dip, shelfal sectors of the basins, including
Stratigraphy in Offshore South African Divergent Basins. incised valley fills (e.g. Figures 146 and 152), but the focus is
An Atlas on Exploration for Cretaceous Lowstand Traps by clearly on the deeper basin settings. Details of clinoform intervals
Soekor (Pty) Ltd. AAPG Studies in Geology Series no. 41. clearly show truncational and onlapping relationships that are
vii + 184 pp. (very large format: 11×24 inches, 28×61 cm). used to identify lowstand systems tracts in the slope sector. The
Tulsa: American Association of Petroleum Geologists. identification of slope channels or canyons in the data sets is lim-
Price US $89.00 (US $59.00 for AAPG members); paper- ited. Turbidite fans are recognized as mounded features which are
back. ISBN 0 89181 049 8. often of relatively small scale in comparison to the prograding
lowstand wedges that overlie them. Slope front fans and basin
Seismic and sequence stratigraphy have presented novel strati- floor fans are distinguished for their position in relation to the
graphic methods for the analysis of basin-fill successions. These base of slope. In two of the basins (Pletmos and Bredasdorp) the
methods have extended and, to some extent, challenged the amount of strata attributed to the transgressive systems tract is
ways in which we correlate, package and interpret sedimentary limited due, it is argued, to low accommodation space in the shelf
strata. The emphasis on methods rather than models in these sector and low sediment supply. Most of the seismic profiles are
opening statements is deliberate as it is the methods that are depositional dip profiles which is understandable, but it would
proving to have long-lasting value rather than the first genera- have been useful to see a wider selection of depositional strike
tion of models to which so many researchers reacted adversely. profiles in order to better gauge the three-dimensional character
This AAPG atlas is the latest in a series of large format publica- of interpreted sequences and systems tracts.
tions that are designed to convey the practice of sequence The volume of data presented in the atlas is considerable, ren-
stratigraphy in the seismic medium and is the first to be con- dering it to be extremely good value. The quality of presentation
cerned with a single depositional province, the Cretaceous age is also high in all respects and the atlas is therefore a highly
post-rift basins of offshore South Africa. practical, usable item that those concerned with either teaching

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142 REVIEWS

or learning sequence stratigraphy in the seismic medium will hydrologist to pause before using the adjective hypopycnal to
find invaluable. describe the flow of water of low density as a buoyant surface
T. Elliott layer atop a larger, more dense body of fluid. That is, if a wide
audience is desired.
Publication demands brevity, and jargon serves to keep one
KEAREY, P. 1996. The New Penguin Dictionary of Geology. ix + within page limits, but not always with precision of meaning, as
366 pp. London: Penguin Books. Price £6.99 (paperback). lacuna shows. Some is unavoidable, as in the cases of rock and
ISBN 0 14 051277 2. mineral names, in taxonomy, and the naming of stratigraphic
stages and local sequences, but impossible to learn entirely. Yet
Readers may be astonished to learn that Earth Science authors at others are redolent with mischievous meaning, piggyback prop-
the Open University debate etymologically. At a recent meeting agation sequence for one. English, or rather Anglo-Saxon, does
one course team was asked to approve a change of usage from not lend itself to many subtleties, so we have barchan, flaser,
palaeo- to paleo- as the prefix denoting old, or indeed ancient. culm and pahoehoe, as well as composites assembled from clas-
The rather jaunty discourse terminated with, let us say, a less sical roots. Clearly, Penguin required a short dictionary, but a
than democratic decision to adopt the latter. Whereas both pre- brief indication of how such words arose would have been inter-
fixes are valid, depending on longitude, it was comforting to esting. I fondly recall Doug Shearman telling me conspiratori-
find that palaeo- is iron-clad on its ascendancy within the ally that the mineral dolomite is named after Count Deodar de
Dictionary of Geology. Fine, except that studying ancient Dolomieu, who first described its strange property of piezolu-
organisms should be palaeo-ontology… I make this picayune minescence (not in the Dictionary, by the way), as well as its
point because Open University students probably will buy more curved crystal faces and pearly lustre. And then there is por-
copies of this neat little book than will any other group. phyry; nothing to do with large crystals set in a fine groundmass,
That confusion aside, any newcomer to a science faces but meaning purple – a Roman mason’s name (‘Any more of
a lahar (p. 172) of jargon, rarely glossarized and one that that purple from Egypt in stock, Septimus? Senate needs some
swiftly buries the unfortunate student. Much of it is perverse. for a tomb or something.’).
A lacuna is a disconformity, otherwise an hiatus or chronos- For once in a review, it is not trite to conclude that The New
tratigraphic gap caused by non-deposition alone, and manifest- Penguin Dictionary of Geology demands its place on every
ing itself without any change in dip or omission within the geologist’s bookshelf, primarily as the remedy for that horrible
underlying sequence of beds. Philip Kearey’s careful cross- feeling that one should know better. At last I know that the Lamé
referencing allows a user to unravel the meaning within such constant (p. 173) has nothing to do with Gracelands, Memphis,
arcane words, and shows that more await an author’s whim. Tennessee.
So, his Dictionary assumes another use: that of allowing a S. A. Drury

https://doi.org/10.1017/S001675689730613X Published online by Cambridge University Press

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