163 Versioning History — Physical Geology – 2nd Edition

7

Versioning History

<!– pb_fixme –>

This page provides a record of edits and changes made to this book since its initial publication in the B.C. Open Textbook Collection. Whenever edits or updates are made, we make the required changes in the text and provide a record and description of those changes here. If the change is minor, the version number increases by 0.01. However, if the edits involve substantial updates, the version number goes up to the next full number. The files on our website always reflect the most recent version, including the print-on-demand copy.

If you find an error in this book, please fill out the Report an Open Textbook Error form.

Version Date Change Details
2.00 September 23, 2019 Added to the B.C. Open Textbook Collection.
2.01 January 27, 2020 Error correction. Applied superscripts to numbers in Table 22.3 in Chapter 22.3.

Fixed broken links in Glossary.

2.02 May 7, 2020 Error correction. Updated Darcy’s equation for estimating the volume of groundwater flow in Chapter 14.2. Altered Exercise 14.1 and its answer in Appendix 3.
2.03 June 10, 2020 Error correction. Replaced Figure 9.1.4 and edited a following bullet point from “S waves do not pass through the outer part of the core.” to “S waves do not pass through the outer liquid part of the core, but S waves can be created by P waves at the surface of the inner core and their inner core velocity is 3.6 km/s.”
2.04 September 22, 2020 Error correction. In Exercise 2.1 in Chapter 2.2, the atomic number of beryllium was changed from 3 to 4.
2.05 January 21, 2021 Error corrections. In Exercise 7.4, replaced the image and fixed broken link. Added answers to the Rock and Mineral Review Exercise to Appendix 3. Made corrections to Chapter 14’s Questions for Review question #5 and updated answer numbering.
2.06 February 26, 2021 Error correction. In Section 16.4 the sentence “Supraglacial (on top of the ice) and Supraglacial (within the ice) sediments that slide off the melting front of a stationary glacier can form a ridge of unsorted sediments called an englacial.” was corrected to “Supraglacial (on top of the ice) and englacial (within the ice) sediments that slide off the melting front of a stationary glacier can form a ridge of unsorted sediments called a terminal moraine.”

<!– pb_fixme –>

<!– pb_fixme –>
<!– pb_fixme –>

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

ACC Physical Geology by Mark Leatherman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book