Scrutton, C. and Powell, J. (Eds.) 1994. Yorkshire Rocks and Landscape. A Field Guide. 224 pp. Maryport: Ellenbank Press for the Yorkshire Geological Society. ISBN 1873551 08 8.

Bibliography

General

Boardman, J. (ed.) 1985. Field Guide to the Periglacial landforms of northern England. 82pp. Quaternary Research Association, Cambridge.

Ellis, S. (ed.) 1987. East Yorkshire Field Guide. vi+ 1 16pp. Quaternary Research Association, Cambridge.

Hemingway, J. E., Wilson, V. & Wright, C. W. 1968. Geology of the Yorkshire coast. Guide No. 34. 47pp. The Geologists' Association.

Kent, P. E. 1980. Eastern England from the Tees to The Wash. British Regional Geology. 2nd edn, vii+155pp. HMSO, London.

Rawson, P. F. & Wright, J. K. (eds) 1992. The Yorkshire Coast.

Geologists' Association Guide No.34. 2nd edn, 17pp. PSS Group, Ongar.

Rayner, D. E. & Hemingway, J. E. (eds) 1974. The geology and mineral resources of Yorkshire. ix+405pp. Yorkshire Geological Society.

Reference works

Allaby, A. & Allaby, M. 1990. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Earth Sciences. xxi+ 410pp. OUP, Oxford.

British Museum (Natural History) 1975. British Palaeozoic Fossils. 4th edn. 203pp. London.

British Museum (Natural History) 1975. British Caenozoic Fossils. 5th edn. 132pp. London.

British Museum (Natural History) 1983. British Mesozoic Fossils. 6th edn. 209pp. London.

Hamilton, W. R., Woolley, A. R. & Bishop, A. C. 1992. Minerals, rocks and fossils. 320pp. Hamlyn, London.

Roberts, J. L. 1989. Field guide to geological structures. 250pp. Macmillan, London.

Schumann, W. 1985 (1992) Rocks, minerals and gemstones. 380pp. HarperCollins, London.

Specific

Only works quoted in the text are listed here. Further articles on various aspects of the geology and geomorphology of Yorkshire may be found particularly in the Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society as well as in many other journals, British Geological Survey Memoirs, and Geologists' Association guides.

Arthurton, R. S., Johnson, E. W. & Mundy, D. J. C. 1988. Geology of the country around Settle. Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheet 60 (England and Wales), ix+ 147pp. HMSO, London.

Boardman J. (ed.) 1981. Field Guide to eastern Cumbria. 128pp. Quaternary Research Association, London.

Bristow, C. S. & Best, J. M. (eds) 1993. Braided Rivers: Form and Processes. Geological Society Special Publication.

Chisholm, J. I. 1981. Growth faulting in the Almscliff Grit (Namurian EI) near Harrogate, Yorkshire. Transactions of the Leeds Geological Association, 9, 5, 61–70.

Cooper, A. H. & Burgess, I. C. 1993. Geology of the country around Harrogate. Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheet 62 (England and Wales), xii & 106 pp. HMSO, London.

Cope, J. C. W., Ingham, J. K. & Rawson, P. F. (eds) 1992. Atlas of palaeogeography and lithofacies. Geological Society Memoir No. 13, 153pp, o6 maps.

de Boer G., Neale, J. W. & Penny, L. F. 1958. A guide to the geology of the area between Market Weighton and the Humber. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, 31, 157–209.

Dunham, K. C. & Wilson, A. A. 1985. Geology of the Northern Pennine Orefield. Vol. 2. Stainmore to Craven. Economic Memoir of the British Geological Survey, 247pp. HMSO, London.

Ehlers, J. Gibbard, P. L. & Rose, J. (eds) 1991. Glacial Deposits in Great Britain and Ireland. 580pp. Balkema, Rotterdam.

Howarth, M. K. 1962. The Jet Rock Series and the Alum Shale Series of the Yorkshire Coast. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, ,33, 381–422.

Lewis, D. (ed) 1991. The Yorkshire Coast. Normandy Press, Beverley, N. Humberside.

Milsom, J. & Rawson, P. F. 1989. The Peak Trough — a major control on the geology of the North Yorkshire coast. Geological Magazine, 126, 699–705.

Pounder, E. J. 1989. Classic Landforms of the Northern Dales. 28pp. Geographical Association, Sheffield.

Raistrick, A. 1975. The lead industry of Wensleydale and Swaledale. Vol. 1. The Mines. 120pp. Moorland Publishing Co. Ltd., Ashbourne, Derbyshire.

Romano, M. & Whyte, M. A. 2003. Jurassic dinosaur tracks and trackways of the Cleveland Basin, Yorkshire: preservation, diversity and distribution. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, 54, 185–215.

Rose, J. 1980. Landform development around Kisdon, upper Swaledale, Yorkshire. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, 43, 201–219.

Rose, J. 1985. The Dimlington Stadial/Dimlington Chronozone: a proposal for naming the main glacial event of the Late Devensian in Britain. Boreas, 14, 225–230.

Rose, J. & Mitchell, W. A. 1989. Quaternary geology of upper Swaledale and adjoining regions: field meeting report. Mercian Geologist,11, 275–283.

Scotese, C. R. & McKerrow, W. S. 1990. Revised World maps and introduction. In McKerrow, W. S. & Scotese, C. R. (eds) Palaeozoic palaeogeography and biogeography. Geological Society Memoir No. 12, 1–21.

Whitham, F. 1991. The stratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous Ferriby, Welton and Burnham formations north of the Humber, northeast England. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, 48, 227–254.

Whyte, M. A. & Romano, M., 1993. Footprints of a sauropod dinosaur from the middle Jurassic of Yorkshire. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, 104, 195–199.

Wright, C. W. & Wright, E. V. 1942. The Chalk of the Yorkshire Wolds. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 53, 112–127.

Wright, J. K. 1968. The Stratigraphy of the Callovian Rocks between New tondale and the Scarborough Coast, Yorkshire. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, 79, 363–399.

Young, B. 1987. Uncommon Pennine Minerals. Part 1. Aurichalcite in the Yorkshire and Cumbria Pennines. Part 2. Strontianite from the Yorkshire Pennines. Transactions of the Leeds Geological Association,ii (2–3), 25–40.

Collections and collectors

Hartley, M. M., Norris, A., Pettitt, C. W., Riley, T. H., & Stier, M. A. (1387) Register of Natural Science Collections in Yorkshire and Humberside. Area Museum and Art Gallery Service for Yorkshire and Humberside.

Nudds, J. R. (ed. on behalf of the Geological Curators' Group) (1994) Directory of British Geological Museums. Geological Society of London Miscellaneous Paper No. 18. This provides significantly more detail for some of the larger museums in the region.