Free UK postage
Lebour, GA. 1886. Outlines of the Geology of Northumberland and Durham. Lambert and Co..
London. (1880). Wyld’s Map of the Superficial Geology of London and Environs. London: James Wyld. Colour lithograph 1:63,360. Wyld, James, jr..
London. Anon. (1931). Geological Excursions Round London. London: T. Murby. 136pp + 6pp of adverts of publisher’s geological publications. Thomas Murby.
London. Jordan, J. B. and Whitaker, W. (1894). Stanford’s Geological Map of London: Shewing Superficial Deposits. London: Edward Stanford. 3rd ed. Stanford.
London. Jordan, J. B. and Whitaker, W. (c1906). Stanford’s Geological Map of London: Shewing Superficial Deposits. London: Edward Stanford. 3rd ed. Stanford.
Mantell, Gideon (1822). The Fossils of the South Downs; or Illustrations of the Geology of Sussex. London: Lupton Relfe, 227 +xvi pp +42 plates. Hardback,. Lupton Relfe.
Marr, J.E. (1916). The Geology of the Lake District and the Scenery as Influenced by the Geological Structure. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge University Press.
Marshall, C.M. (ed.) (1948). Guide to the Geology of the East Midlands. University of Nottingham. 111pp. University of Nottingham.
Mathieson, Andrew, (n.d.). Staple Edge Geology Teaching Trail. Nature Conservancy Council. In very good condition. Geologists' Association.
Miller, Hugh, (1874). First Impressions of England and Its People, 1874. William P. Nimmo.
Millward, R. and Robinson, A. (1973). South-East England – The Channel Coastlands. London: Macmillan. First edition. MacMillan.
Moseley, Frank (ed.) (1978). The Geology of the Lake District. Yorkshire Geological Society, Occasional Publication No.3. Yorkshire Geological Society.
Murchison, R I. 1867*. ‘The Geological Structure of the Parish of Harting [NW Sussex]’, 13pp. in The History of Harting. published by author.
Neves, R. and Downie, C. (eds.) Geological Excursions in the Sheffield Region, and the Peak District National Park. University of Sheffield.
Osborne, Roger (1998). The Floating Egg: Episodes in the Making of Geology. London: Jonathan Cape. First Hardback edition. 372pp. Jonathan Cape.
Owen, Richard (1847). ‘On the fossil remains of mammalia . . . from the Eocene Sand formation of Hordle, New Hampshire, extract from QJGS, v.3, pt.1, pp.17-46 + fold-out fossil plate. Geological Society of London.
Parkinson, D. (1936). The Carboniferous Succession in the Slaidburn District, Yorkshire. Geological Society of London.
Payne, John (ed.) (2017). Herefordshire’s Rocks and Scenery; a Geology of the County. Almeley: Logaston Press. Logaston Press.
Peile, Williamson, (1831), ’Description of a Group of Dykes, termed Riders, discovered in Whitehaven Colliery’, extract from Trans. Nat. Hist. Soc. Northumberland, Durham & Newcastle . v1,. Trans Northum, Durham, Newcastle.
Phillips, John (1853). The Rivers, Mountains and Sea-Coast of Yorkshire with Essays on the Climate, Scenery, and Ancient Inhabitants of the County. London: John Murray, 302pp,. John Murray.
Phillips, John. 1871. Geology of Oxford and the Valley of the Thames. Clarendon Press.
Powell, PM. (c1823). Hastings Guide: a Concise Historical and Topographical Sketch of Hastings, Battle, Winchelsea, and Rye. Hastings: author, and London: Longmans. Longman et al.
Prestwich, J. and Moriris, J. (1846). ‘On the Wealden Strata exposed by the Tunbridge Wells Railway’, extract from QJGS. Geological Society of London.