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Science 16 November 1962:
Vol. 138. no. 3542, pp. 824 - 825
DOI: 10.1126/science.138.3542.824

Articles

Antarctica: Geology of the Ellsworth Mountains

John J. Anderson 1, Thomas W. Bastien 1, Paul G. Schmidt 1, John F. Splettstoesser 1, and Campbell Craddock 1

1 Department of Geology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

Geologic reconnaissance indicates that the Ellsworth Mountains consist mainly of thousands of feet of folded, slightly metamorphosed, clastic sedimentary rocks of unknown age. Three major stratigraphic units are recognized, but only fragmentary fossils have been found. The folding is asymmetric, overturned, or recumbent; fold axes strike north, 10° to 20° west. Basic igneous sills occur in the northern Heritage Range.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Glossopteris Discovered in West Antarctica.
C. Craddock, T. W. Bastien, R. H. Rutford, and J. J. Anderson (1965)
Science 148, 634-637
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