[{"name":"skelton-2016-islay-1","title":"Stable isotope data from Neoproterozoic carbonate rocks, Islay, Scotland","summary":"Oxygen and carbon isotope data from the Lossit Limestone and Bonahaven Dolomite Formations. These formations are below and above the Port Askaig Tillite Formation which was probably deposited during Sturtian glaciation.","citations":"Skelton, A., Lewerentz, A., Kleine, B., Webster, D. and Pitcairn, I., 2015. Structural Channelling of Metamorphic Fluids on Islay, Scotland: Implications for Paleoclimatic Reconstruction. Journal of Petrology 56 (11), 2145\u20132172, DOI: 10.1093\/petrology\/egv067","comments":"","category":"Terrestrial","subcategory":"Rocks","keywords":"Oxygen isotopes; Carbon isotopes; Neoproterozoic glaciations; Snowball Earth","scientist":"Alasdair Skelton","firstname":"Alasdair","lastname":"Skelton","address":"Department of Geological Sciences; Stockholm University","postalcode":"SE-106 91","city":"Stockholm","province":"","country":"Sweden","parameters":"Earth science > Solid earth > Rocks\/minerals\/crystals > Metamorphic rocks","location":"Continent > Europe > Northern Europe > British Isles","progress":"Completed","language":"English","project":"","publisher":"Bolin Centre Database","version":"1","constrains":"Cite Skelton et al. (2015).","access":"Free"}]