“…The role of the increasing deformation on the hardness and composition of the Middle (Turonian) and Upper ('Senonian') Chalk associated with post-Cretaceous steep, asymmetrical east-west folding in southern England (Surrey; Isle of Wight; Dorset) and Yorkshire has been investigated by Mimran (1975Mimran ( , 1977Mimran ( , 1978, making comparison to his own findings (ideas) on the unfolded chalk of Northern Ireland (Mimran 1978) which differ significantly from those of Wolfe (1968) and Scholle (1974). Mimran (1977Mimran ( , 1978 modelled the effects of increasing deformation using measurements of acid insoluble residue, bulk specific gravity (intact dry density), concentration and distortion of calcispheres (assumed to be originally spherical in form), values of various elements (Sr, Mg, Ti, Ba), and stable isotopes (δ 18 O, δ 13 C) in bulk chalk calcite, and microfabric analysis.…”