Geology of the Shore of the Severn. 



B5 



the advantage of examining arranged collections, or of con- 

 sulting the larger and more expensive works upon the subject, I 

 have been under the necessity of giving only the generic names 

 of some of the fossil bodies, and of leaving the determination 

 of their species until a more favourable opportunity. In the 

 annexed plate will be seen the whole extent of the shore of 

 the Severn, in the parish of Awre, from its most extreme point 

 north, adjoining the parish of Newnham to its extreme point 

 west, bordering on the parish of Lidney, and in which the 

 particular spots mentioned in this memoir are pointed out. 

 The whole extent of the shore rather exceeds six and a half 

 miles, and the scale in the plate is that of two inches to a 

 mile. 



a 



\ 



^e. 



%, 



i 



lb 



/A| 



S. 

 S- 



*^« 



CfiH 



et^- 



a, Commencement of the Parish of 

 Awre. 



b, Box-Pile. 



c to d, Bed of Clay. 

 d, Hampstells. 

 e,/, ^r, Muddy Shore. 

 A, The Durable. 

 JAN.—MARCH, 1830. 



I, The Woodend. 



k, Bream's Pile. 



/, Gatcomb. 



wi,The Stream at Purton Passage, 



which divides the Parishes of Awre 



and Lidney. 

 n, n, Barrows. 



F 



