An Atlas of Speleothem Microfabrics

L. Bruce Railsback, Department of Geology, University of Georgia.

 

APPENDICES

  Appendix A: Other Carbonate Materials  
  Travertine, Tivoli, Italy.   Figure A-1  
  Travertine, southeastern Idaho, U.S.A..   Figure A-2  
  Tufa, Mono Lake, California, U.S.A.   Figure A-3  
  Tufa, Lake James, Indiana, U.S.A..   Figure A-4  
  Calcrete, Morrow County, Oregon, U.S.A.   Figure A-5  
  Jurassic grainstone (limestone), Ziz Valley, Morocco.   Figure A-6  
  Ordovician wackestone (limestone), Woodbury, Tennessee, U.S.A.   Figure A-7  
  Cambrian dolostone, Podosi, Missouri, U.S.A.   Figure A-8  
  Calcite cemented sandstone, South America.   Figure A-9  
  Marble (metamorphic rock), Tuscany, Italy.   Figure A-10  
  Carbonatite (igneous rock), Arkansas, U.S.A.   Figure A-11  
  Modern gastropod (snail) shell, U.S.A.   Figure A-12  
         
  Appendix B: Sections of Entire Speleothems  
  Stalagmite from Drotsky's Cave, Botswana.   Figure B-1  
  Stalactites from Wadi Sannur Cavern, Egypt.   Figure B-2  
  Flowstone from an unnamed cave, Carthage, Tennessee.   Figure B-3  
  Stalagmite MA1 from Anjohibe Cave, Madagascar.   Figure B-4  
  Stalagmite MA3 from Anjohibe Cave, Madagascar.   Figure B-5  
  Cave pearls from Drum Cave, Jamaica.   Figure B-6  
  Stalagmite from Shangdong Cave, Guizhou, China.   Figure B-7  
  Stalagmite from Shantai Cave, Guizhou, China.   Figure B-8  
  Stalagmite from Shangdong Cave, Guizhou, China.   Figure B-9  
  Soda-straw stalactite from Augusta, Georgia, U.S.A.   Figure B-10  
  Coralloid-bearing stalagmite from Harasib Cave, Namibia.   Figure B-11  
         

Back to the Index to the Atlas of Speleothem Microfabrics