please empty your brain below

Thanks for this, especially the part about the Rockingham Anomaly. Something about my manor that I hadn’t the faintest inkling of…
Ever read "London Clay" by Tom Chivers?
I look forward to more of this sort of thing. And thank you for today's new word: pingo.
Interesting stuff. Residing outside London, I was fascinated on a local geology walk to be shown a graphic of the original route of The Thames, before ice age glaciation moved it significantly to the south. I'm waiting with great expectation for 'London Clay' to become available through the library system.
Thanks for the link to LPG. I'm teetering on the edge of the rabbit hole.
Thanks for this, i like a bit of geology.
I have read London Clay thanks - it has a whole chapter about the Rockingham Anomaly.

It's good, but I would have like a bit more geology and a bit less personal anecdote (especially for a book completed over lockdown).
In "The White Stones" (Grosseteste Press, London: 1969), Jeremy Halvard Prynne writes of “The Glacial Question, Unsolved”...

“… The
Moraine runs axial to the Finchley Road
Including hippopotamus, which isn’t a
Joke any more than the present fringe
Of intellectual habit."
I had been vaguely aware that Coldfall Wood had some sort of importance, but that's a really interesting resource
'...cracking rock formation'!
Geology is very gneiss. A lot of people really take the composition of the earth for granite. Sure, every science has its faults, but geology really rocks.

I lava geology.










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