Online Encyclopedia

PORTLANDIAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 122 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PORTLANDIAN  , in

geology, a subdivision of the Upper
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Jurassic
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system that includes the strata lying between the Kimeridge Clay and the Purbeck beds . These rocks are well exposed on the isle of Portland, Dorsetshire, where they have been quarried for more than Doc years . J . Mitchell appears to have been the first to use the
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term " Portland lime " in
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geological literature (1788); T . Webster spoke of the " Portland Oolite " in 1812 . In England the strata are very variable; the upper
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part consists principally of limestones, shelly, oolitic or compact, or in places very closely resembling
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chalk (Upway, Portisham,
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Brill, Chilmark) . Nodules and layers of chert are well
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developed in some of the limestones of Dorsetshire and elsewhere; and a silicified oolite occurs near St
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Alban's Head . About
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Swindon, beds of sand are
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common in the Upper Portland beds with layers of calcareous
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sandstone (Swindon stone) . Marly and sandy beds occur also at Shotover Hill . The
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lower portion is usually sandy and shows a gradual passage into the underlying Kimeridge Clay . W . H .

Fitton in 1827 gave the name " Portland Sand" to this division . The Upper Portlandian in Dorsetshire is 130–170 ft. thick; the Lower Portlandian in the same
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district is 100–120 ft . These rocks crop out from South Dorsetshire into Wiltshire, Oxfordshire and Buckingham-
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shire, and possibly extend beneath younger rocks into
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Bedford-shire and Cambridgeshire . They have been proved by borings in Sussex and Kent, and in
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Yorkshire they are represented by part of the Speeton Clays, and in
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Lincolnshire by part of the Spilsby Sand . At Swindon and
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Aylesbury a conglomeratic layer with small pebbles of lydite and phosphatized fossils lies at the
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base of the Portland Stone . The Upper Portlandian of England is characterized by the ammonite Perisphinctes giganteus, along with Cytheria (Cyrena) rugosa, Trigonia gibbosa, Perisphinctes boloniensis and Trigonia incurva as subzonal forms . Olcostephanus gigas is the zonal ammonite in the Lower Portlandian, associated with Trigonia Pellati, Cyprina Brongniarti, Exogyra brantrutana and
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Astarte Saemanni as subzonal indices . Other characteristic fossils are Cerithiunt portlandicum, the casts of which form the familiar " Portland screw,"Isastraea,oblonga, the Chelonian Stegochelys; the remains of saurians Pliosaurus and Cimoliosaurus and others are found; Mesodon, Ischyodus and other fishes occur in this formation . The Portland limestones have been much in demand for
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building purposes; at Portland the " Top Roach," the " Whit Bed" or top freestone, and the " Best Bed" (or Base Bed) are the best known . In the Vale of Wardour the lower Portlandian has been largely quarried; the stone from this neighbourhood is often described as Wardour, Tisbury or Chilmark stone . Swindon stone is a calcareous sandstone that occurs in the sands of the Upper Portland beds near Swindon . Rocks of Portlandian age are well developed on the continent of
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Europe, but the grouping of the strata is different in some respects from that adopted by
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English geologists .

In

France the " Portlandian " is usually taken to include the
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Purbeckian as well as the equivalents of the English Portland beds, and some authors, e.g . E . Renevier, have included more or less of the
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Kimeridgian in this division . The Portlandian of north-west Germany includes the Eimheckhauser Plattenkalk and the Lower Portland
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Kalk . Oppel's " Tithonian " (tithonic) division, embracing Upper Kimeridge beds, Portlandian and Purbeckian beds in the Alpine district, is now recognized as a deeper
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water deposit of this time with many points of resemblance to the
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Russian development to which the name " Volgian " has been applied by S . Nikitin . The Portlandian beds of Yorkshire are more nearly related to the Volgian phase than to the beds of the same age in the south of England . The term Bononian (= Bolonian) was suggested by J . F . Blake in 188i for a part of the Portlandian series, from their occurrence at Boulogne (Bononia) where they are similar to the beds of Dorset . He limited the name Portlandian to the Purbeckian and Upper Portlandian (Portland stone), while he placed the Portland Sands and upper part of the Kimeridge Clay in his Bolonian division: this scheme has not been accepted in England . See JURASSIC .

End of Article: PORTLANDIAN
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WILLIAM HENRY CAVENDISH BENTINCK PORTLAND
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JOSEPH ELLISON PORTLOCK (1794–1864)

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