
This compact guide opens the world of rocks to anyone who has ever wondered why the cliffs, beaches, or hills look the way they do. Written for the layperson, it explains how each stone type records a story of ancient seas, deserts, or fiery interiors, turning ordinary scenery into a living museum. The author balances clear descriptions with a touch of scientific history, showing how early mineralogists first sorted stones before modern theories of their birth emerged.
The book walks through the major families—limestones, sandstones, clays, shales, slates, igneous and metamorphic rocks—each illustrated with striking photographs from places like the French limestone plateaus, the Cape of Good Hope, and the glaciers of Spitsbergen. Along the way, readers learn how grain size hints at distant origins, how lava flows betray hidden magma chambers, and how weathering reshapes the landscape we see today. By the end, the reader feels equipped to read the ground beneath their feet as a readable record of Earth’s deep past.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (225K characters)
Series
The Cambridge manuals of science and literature
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1912.
Credits
Charlene Taylor, Tom Cosmas and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Release date
2022-03-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1859–1924
A geologist and science writer who helped make rocks, minerals, and landscapes feel vivid and approachable for general readers. He taught for many years in Dublin and wrote widely on geology, petrology, and the history of the Earth.
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