The multistage concept is explained and illustrated, with particular reference to a bornhardt from the southern Yilgarn Block of southwestern Western Australia. Hyden Rock is a complex inselberg developed on Archaean granite. It probably developed through fracture-controlled differential subsurface weathering in the Cretaceous, followed in the Eocene by erosion of the lateritic regolith and exposure of the massive compartment as an inselberg. But the variations in fracture density to which Hyden Rock owes its origin developed long before the Cretaceous, probably in the latest Archaean or earliest Proterozoic. The relief amplitude of the residual has increased through the Cainozoic. A rich assemblage of minor forms (basins, runnels, tafoni, ...
Several prominent bornhardts, or dome-shaped granitic hills, occur in or near the valley of the Salt...
ABSTRACT. A general description is given of what is now known as the Mount Warning Shield Volcano. T...
The Archaean era lasted for about one third of the Earth's history, from ca 4.0 until 2.5 billion ye...
Most of the granitic residuals of the Wheat Belt of southwestern Western Australia are bornhardts, w...
Examination and monitoring of bornhardts and of quarry exposures on the Gawler Craton exposed on nor...
Three domical inselbergs or bornhardts, Disappointment, McDermid and Bank Rocks, located near the Hy...
Bornhardts are bald domical hills either standing in isolation as inselbergs ("island mountains"), o...
The Frome Embayment, in the south of the Eromanga Basin, is the southernmost lobe of an intracontine...
The Gawler Ranges is a massif comprising bornhardts developed on Mesoproterozoic dacite, rhyodacite ...
Identifying the influence of neotectonics on the morphology of elevated passive margins is complicat...
That many landforms have their origins in the distant past is highlighted by the multistage concept,...
Cenozoic landscape development on the southeastern Australian rifted margin, as recorded by mid‐Tert...
The landscape expression of a wide range of ancient and contemporary regolith materials in the vicin...
[Abstract] Bornhardts are steep-sided domical hills. The profiles are associated with sheet fractur...
[Abstract] That many landforms have their origins in the distant past is highlighted by the multista...
Several prominent bornhardts, or dome-shaped granitic hills, occur in or near the valley of the Salt...
ABSTRACT. A general description is given of what is now known as the Mount Warning Shield Volcano. T...
The Archaean era lasted for about one third of the Earth's history, from ca 4.0 until 2.5 billion ye...
Most of the granitic residuals of the Wheat Belt of southwestern Western Australia are bornhardts, w...
Examination and monitoring of bornhardts and of quarry exposures on the Gawler Craton exposed on nor...
Three domical inselbergs or bornhardts, Disappointment, McDermid and Bank Rocks, located near the Hy...
Bornhardts are bald domical hills either standing in isolation as inselbergs ("island mountains"), o...
The Frome Embayment, in the south of the Eromanga Basin, is the southernmost lobe of an intracontine...
The Gawler Ranges is a massif comprising bornhardts developed on Mesoproterozoic dacite, rhyodacite ...
Identifying the influence of neotectonics on the morphology of elevated passive margins is complicat...
That many landforms have their origins in the distant past is highlighted by the multistage concept,...
Cenozoic landscape development on the southeastern Australian rifted margin, as recorded by mid‐Tert...
The landscape expression of a wide range of ancient and contemporary regolith materials in the vicin...
[Abstract] Bornhardts are steep-sided domical hills. The profiles are associated with sheet fractur...
[Abstract] That many landforms have their origins in the distant past is highlighted by the multista...
Several prominent bornhardts, or dome-shaped granitic hills, occur in or near the valley of the Salt...
ABSTRACT. A general description is given of what is now known as the Mount Warning Shield Volcano. T...
The Archaean era lasted for about one third of the Earth's history, from ca 4.0 until 2.5 billion ye...