Abstract
THE primary object of these experiments was to explain on what mechanical principles the remarkable rock-structures recently discovered by the Geological Survey in the North-West Highlands might have been produced. In experimenting on the behaviour of strata when subjected to horizontal pressure, it has been usual to regard large rock-masses as practically plastic bodies, and to imitate in the laboratory the great flexures and plications of Nature by compressing layers of clay, cloth, and other plastic or flexible substances. It was, however, evident, as soon as the true structure of the North-West Highland area was unravelled, that the rocks had, to a very large extent, behaved like rigid bodies under the enormous lateral pressure to which they had once been subjected. Instead of following the usual method of using plastic materials, the author therefore set to work to devise strata sufficiently rigid to snap rather than bend and become folded on the application of lateral pressure. It is to this peculiarity in the character of the materials, rather than to any great novelty in the methods, that the interesting results obtained are mainly due.
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Experiments in Mountain Building 1 . Nature 37, 488–490 (1888). https://doi.org/10.1038/037488d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/037488d0