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Contributions from Cam Nelson

Cam Nelson

Cam Nelson has generously donated outcrop and petrographic images of  New Zealand Oligocene, cool-water limestones and modern temperate carbonates.

Emeritus Professor at Waikato University

BSc (Hons) Well,   PhD Auck FRSNZ

Cam was a founding member of the School of Science in 1971. He has received several honours: from the Geological Society of New Zealand the Hochstetter Lecturer (1984) and McKay Hammer Award (1991). He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 1995 and received the Hutton Medal (Earth Sciences) from that society in 2004.

Cam’s current research fields are:

  1. Applications of stable oxygen and carbon isotopes in sedimentology, stratigraphy, paleoclimatology and paleoceanography, especially in the Neogene and Quaternary periods;
  2. Carbonate sedimentology, especially the petrology, diagenesis and sequence stratigraphy of nontropical carbonates and limestones; and
  3. Cenozoic geology of the southwest Pacific region and New Zealand, especially South Auckland/King Country and East Coast Basins.
Archives
Categories
dip and strike compass
Measuring dip and strike
sandstone classification header
Classification of sandstones
Calcite cemented subarkose, Proterozoic Altyn Fm. southern Alberta
Sandstones in thin section
poles to bedding great circles
Stereographic projection – poles to planes
froude-reynolds-antidunes-header-768x439-1
Fluid flow: Froude and Reynolds numbers
Stokes Law for particle settling in a schematic context of other fluid flow functions
Fluid flow: Stokes Law and particle settling
sedimentary-basins-distribution-1-768x711
Classification of sedimentary basins
Model are representational descriptions are written in different languages - diagrammatic, descriptive, mathematical, and conceptual. They commonly contain variables and dimensionless quantities that permit quantitative analysis of the physical systems the models represent.
Geological models
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