Granite and Grit

By Ronald Turnbull

Online price: £20.00
Hardback, 208pp
This edition is not available yet.
Published: 22nd January 2009
Category: Geology & the lithosphere, Active outdoor pursuits
About this Book

It is not as widely known as it should be that Britain has the most varied geology of any country in the world. This book is a celebration in words and pictures of what its mountains are made of, and how they got there. This in turn determines what they're like to climb, scramble on, or walk over. Why is Skiddaw slate so slippery? How do tors form? Why is gritstone so difficult? Why is Lakeland so picturesque, and the granite lands so grim and forbidding?

Geology is destiny, whether it's the rubbishy nature of gullies and screes, the sculpting of valleys by ice or the landslip weirdness of Quiraing on the Isle of Skye. British mountains contain many interesting and different ingredients: gneiss and granite and gabbro; limestone and sandstone; schist and slate; the product and the debris of tectonic shifts, volcanoes, earthquakes and glaciers over many millennia.

This book explains all this to the layman, from an expert but personal perspective, and will add immeasurably to the fun and satisfaction to be gained from any day in the hills.

Publication Details:


Publisher:
 Frances Lincoln
ISBN:
 9780711229143
Format:
 280 mm x 215 mm (11 inches x 8.5 inches)
Binding:
 Hardback
208 pages
250 colour photos and illustrations

BISAC Code:
  HIS015000, HIS052000

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