3o8 Sir\l,C,l^i;oLV.fiELD'*sAd£lilwnalObfervatiQns^ ^c. 



nefs is very much increafed, and foon after nothing but chalk ap- 

 pears in St. Boniface's hill. In what form the rock re-appears at 

 Dunnofe to the eaO: of St. Boniface, I have had no opportunity of 

 examining. 



I fhould not, dear Sir, trouble you with thefe defe6live ob- 

 fervations, but that every notice, however imperfect, may be of ufe 

 when conne6ted by future obfervations, and that they may ferve 

 as a ftimulus to other travellers who often go over this beautiful 

 line of country, to turn their attention to its fingular natural phse« 

 nomena. 



I fend you two fpecimens of the broken flints ; one from above 

 Brading, the other from near Carifbrook; but the tickets are 

 miflaid, and I am not fure which is which. 



I remain, Sec. 



TSlney Street, 

 Mav 25. 1801. 



XXII. Defcri/- 



