Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Weald_Clay> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 73 of
73
with 100 triples per page.
- Weald_Clay abstract "Weald Clay or the Weald Clay Formation is a Lower Cretaceous sedimentary rock underlying areas of South East England. It is part of the Wealden Group of rocks. The clay is named after the Weald, an area of Sussex and Kent. It varies from orange and grey in colour and is used in brickmaking.The un-weathered form is blue/grey, and the yellow/orange is the weathered form; they have quite different physical properties. Blue looks superficially like a soft slate, is quite dry and hard and will support the weight of buildings quite easily.Because it is quite impermeable, and so dry, it does not get broken by tree roots. It is typically found at 750mm down below a layer of yellow clay. Yellow, found on the surface, absorbs water quite readily so becomes very soft in the winter.The two different types make quite different bricks.".
- Weald_Clay thumbnail Baryonyx_head_&_forelimb_NHM.jpg?width=300.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageID "1770941".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageLength "4243".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageOutDegree "34".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageRevisionID "681794327".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Ankylosauria.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Barremian.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Baryonyx.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Brick.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Category:Claystone.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Category:Geologic_formations_of_the_United_Kingdom.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Category:Geology_of_England.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Clay.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Cretaceous.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Dinosaur.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Geological_formation.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Hauterivian.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Horshamosaurus.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Ithonidae.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Lists_of_dinosaur-bearing_stratigraphic_units.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink London_Clay.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Lower_Greensand_Group.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Oxford_Clay_Formation.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Polacanthinae.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Polacanthus.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Principiala.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Sedimentary_rock.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Sussex.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Tunbridge_Wells_Sand_Formation.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Valdosaurus.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Weald.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Wealden.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink Wealden_Supergroup.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLink File:Baryonyx_head_&_forelimb_NHM.jpg.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Lower Weald Clay".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Upper Weald Clay Formation".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Upper Weald Clay".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Weald Clay".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Weald clay".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "Wealden clay".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "clays".
- Weald_Clay wikiPageWikiLinkText "weald clay".
- Weald_Clay age "Hauterivian-Barremian,".
- Weald_Clay name "Weald Clay".
- Weald_Clay overlies Tunbridge_Wells_Sand_Formation.
- Weald_Clay region England.
- Weald_Clay thickness "27600.0".
- Weald_Clay type Geological_formation.
- Weald_Clay underlies Lower_Greensand_Group.
- Weald_Clay unitof Wealden_Supergroup.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:England-stub.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Flag.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fossilrange.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_rockunit.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Weald_Clay wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Regional-geology-stub.
- Weald_Clay subject Category:Claystone.
- Weald_Clay subject Category:Geologic_formations_of_the_United_Kingdom.
- Weald_Clay subject Category:Geology_of_England.
- Weald_Clay type Formation.
- Weald_Clay type Landform.
- Weald_Clay comment "Weald Clay or the Weald Clay Formation is a Lower Cretaceous sedimentary rock underlying areas of South East England. It is part of the Wealden Group of rocks. The clay is named after the Weald, an area of Sussex and Kent. It varies from orange and grey in colour and is used in brickmaking.The un-weathered form is blue/grey, and the yellow/orange is the weathered form; they have quite different physical properties.".
- Weald_Clay label "Weald Clay".
- Weald_Clay sameAs Q7977996.
- Weald_Clay sameAs m.05vnx1.
- Weald_Clay sameAs Q7977996.
- Weald_Clay wasDerivedFrom Weald_Clay?oldid=681794327.
- Weald_Clay depiction Baryonyx_head_&_forelimb_NHM.jpg.
- Weald_Clay isPrimaryTopicOf Weald_Clay.