| Reference Type | Journal (article/letter/editorial) |
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| Title | II.—On Watersheds |
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| Journal | Geological Magazine |
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| Year | 1866 (August) | Series:Volume | 1:3 |
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| Issue | 26 |
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| Publisher | Cambridge University Press (CUP) |
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| DOI | doi:10.1017/s001675680016755x |
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| Generate Citation Formats |
| Mindat Ref. ID | 264366 | Long-form Identifier | mindat:1:5:264366:7 |
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| GUID | 0 |
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| Full Reference | (1866) II.—On Watersheds. Geological Magazine, S. 1 Vol. 3 (26) 344-348 doi:10.1017/s001675680016755x |
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| Plain Text | (1866) II.—On Watersheds. Geological Magazine, S. 1 Vol. 3 (26) 344-348 doi:10.1017/s001675680016755x |
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| In | (1866, August) Geological Magazine S. 1 Vol. 3 (26) Cambridge University Press (CUP) |
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| Abstract/Notes | In connection with the discussion on the origin of hills and valleys, which has recently occupied the pages of the Geological Magazine, I would submit a few observations on some phenomena, in evidence of the great power of subaërial denudation, which seem scarcely to have been noticed with the prominence they deserve. I assume that the joint action of sea and river denudation is un-questioned, and that the main point under discussion is relative to which of these processes determined the final contour of the land. What I wish particularly to notice is that the forma of the whole land surface with some trifling exceptions (as lake basins, which appear to admit of special explanation) is merely a modification of the same principle of contour as the true river valley, exhibiting a system of watersheds by which almost everypart of the land is connected with the sea by adjacent land on a graduated series of levels lower than itself. |
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