Abstract
I FEAR that the hope expressed by Prof. Bonney, somewhat incongruously in its connection, in his recent review of Russell's “Glaciers of North America,” that “perhaps in future we shall hear less of rampant ice-sheets at Gloppa and Moel Tryfan!” is not destined to be fulfilled. There will be something more to hear shortly, if he care to listen, respecting that part of this ice-sheet which covered the Isle of Man. This portion was distinctly of the “rampant” type, as Mr. P. F. Kendall has already shown, carrying up shells in one place, and boulders of Foxdale granite in another, and erratics from the south of Scotland in another, as a matter of every-day work—just as recent investigations have shown to be the case in regions where to-day there are glaciers of other than the Alpine type.
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LAMPLUGH, G. Shelly Glacial Deposits. Nature 56, 10 (1897). https://doi.org/10.1038/056010a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/056010a0
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