Abstract
E increasing specialisation of science and its JL literature inspires an ever-growing demand for expositions of separate branches in terms suitable for workers in other fields. The effort to prepare such accounts is often beneficial to those who provide as well as to those who hear or read them; but some stimulus for their provision is needful, and notable among the available effective stimuli are the endowed annual lectureships of such bodies as the Institution of Civil Engineers. This is well exemplified in the forty-first James Forrest Lecture, delivered to that Institution on May 7 by Prof. O. T. Jones, who took geophysics as his subject.
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Physical Methods in the Study of Earth Structure. Nature 135, 844–845 (1935). https://doi.org/10.1038/135844b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/135844b0