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The Southern Uplands of Scotland

Abstract

To the able articles on this subject contributed to your pages by Prof. Harkness, I should like to be permitted to make an addition. He has referred to some opinions and observations of mine, but I am anxious that it should be generally known to what an extent the results obtained by the Geological Survey are due to the zeal and ability of my colleagues. Thus, Mr. R. L. Jackhas the merit of detecting and tracing the Caradoc basin of the Leadhills, and of working out the structure of that region which has been of so much service in the subsequent progress of the Survey. Mr. John Horne has carried the lines far into Galloway, and Mr. D. R. Irvine has traced them across a great part of Wigtownshire. Mr. H. Skae has mapped them across Dumfriesshire into Selkirkshire, while Mr. B. N. Peach, besides doing excellent service in the west, is now running them across the rest of the country towards the sea on the east.

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GEIKIE, A. The Southern Uplands of Scotland. Nature 9, 81–82 (1873). https://doi.org/10.1038/009081b0

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