At the advent of the twentieth century, geologists believed that folded continental mountain chains like the Alps were due to horizontal compression, resulting from contractions of the Earth's crust as it cooled. In 1918, Albert Heim defended this point of view and illustrated it with a geological section across Switzerland. In 1915, however, and in short notes as early as 1912, Alfred Wegener in Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane (The Origin of Continents and Oceans) proposed that mountains were the result of collisions between light continents drifting and floating on denser formations of the Earth's interior, also present at the bottom of the oceans. Before this (1906), Otto Ampferer had already proposed the association of folds wi...
The general picture of the physiographic map of Switzerland reflects the tectonic structure rather d...
International audienceThe internal zones of the Western Alps arc are derived from an oceanic and con...
The article examines the organizational patterns of nineteenth-century Swiss Alpine geology. It argu...
Following the major contributions of Wegener and Argand (Part 1), it was the work of synthesis carri...
International audienceAt the beginning of the XX th century, a majority of geologists believe that t...
International audienceThree attempts of understanding the mechanisms that could account for the Eart...
International audienceAs early as 1913, using interdisciplinary arguments, Alfred Wegener showed tha...
En 1912, le météorologue allemand Wegener expose une théorie fondée sur une nouvelle conception du g...
This study reviews and synthesizes the present knowledge on the Sesia-Dent Blanche nappes, the highe...
International audienceAs early as the 1930s, Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift was abando...
International audienceAs early as the 1930s, Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift was abando...
International audienceResulting from plate collision, the Alpine chain is predominantly continental....
31p.International audienceThe initial propagation of the Western Alpine orogen was directed northwes...
New whole-rock geochemical and coupled U–Pb and Lu–Hf LA-ICP-MS zircon data of metasedimentary rocks...
Plate tectonics developed around 1965 as a powerful tool to describe the tectonic movements of the E...
The general picture of the physiographic map of Switzerland reflects the tectonic structure rather d...
International audienceThe internal zones of the Western Alps arc are derived from an oceanic and con...
The article examines the organizational patterns of nineteenth-century Swiss Alpine geology. It argu...
Following the major contributions of Wegener and Argand (Part 1), it was the work of synthesis carri...
International audienceAt the beginning of the XX th century, a majority of geologists believe that t...
International audienceThree attempts of understanding the mechanisms that could account for the Eart...
International audienceAs early as 1913, using interdisciplinary arguments, Alfred Wegener showed tha...
En 1912, le météorologue allemand Wegener expose une théorie fondée sur une nouvelle conception du g...
This study reviews and synthesizes the present knowledge on the Sesia-Dent Blanche nappes, the highe...
International audienceAs early as the 1930s, Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift was abando...
International audienceAs early as the 1930s, Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift was abando...
International audienceResulting from plate collision, the Alpine chain is predominantly continental....
31p.International audienceThe initial propagation of the Western Alpine orogen was directed northwes...
New whole-rock geochemical and coupled U–Pb and Lu–Hf LA-ICP-MS zircon data of metasedimentary rocks...
Plate tectonics developed around 1965 as a powerful tool to describe the tectonic movements of the E...
The general picture of the physiographic map of Switzerland reflects the tectonic structure rather d...
International audienceThe internal zones of the Western Alps arc are derived from an oceanic and con...
The article examines the organizational patterns of nineteenth-century Swiss Alpine geology. It argu...