1S21.3 and adjoining Farts of the Continent, 463 



Diluvium. Diluvium. 



Gravel and rolled blocks, both on hills 

 and in valleys, not produced by any 

 causes now in action. 



Gravel of the valleys of the Thames, Se- 

 vern, and Humber. 



Blocks of Cumberland granite in the plain 

 of Shropshire, near JtJridgenorth ; and 



. of Galway granite at Shalk on the SW 

 .of Carlisle, in Cumberland. 



TERTIARY FORMATIONS, 

 liondon and Hampshire basins. 



I . Freshwater Limestone. 

 Headen Cliff, Isle of Wight. 



2. London Clay. 

 Highgate Hill, London. 



With plants and marine fish. 

 I«le of J5hep^,y. 



5. P antic Clay Formation, 



Clay, marlj sand, and gravel, with marine 

 shells 

 ins of London, Hants, and Dorset. 



J»il4 'SO i' 



4. Puddingslune, of Ilertfotdshire^ 



Druid sandstone blocks of Buckingham- 

 shire, Wilts, and Dorset. 



5". Lignltd and O'ance CoaL Imperfect 

 iVoud Coal. 



Alum Bay. Isle of Wight. 

 Corfe Clay Pits. Isle of Purbeck. 



Same as in England. 



Superficial gravel, covering the regular 

 Tertiary strata of the valleys of the Po, 

 the Danube, and Geneva. 



Granite Blocks on the Jura above Neuf- 

 chatel, and on the Saleve mountain 

 near Geneva. .:.L 



TERTIARY FORMATIONS. 



Basin of Paris ; Valleys of the Po, the 

 Danube, and Switzsrlanjd. 



I . Cal aire <r Eau Douce. 



Basin of Paris ; Fiienisberg, near Bemej 

 St. Saphorin, near Vevey ; Horgien, 

 near Zuiich ; Locle on the Jura ; Val» 

 ley of the Rhine, three miles NE of 

 Basle These are principally composed 

 of marl stone, and contain |)eds of coal, 

 with Fresliwater shells intermixed. 



Oeningin, near Schaffhausen, with fresh- 

 water fish. 



2. Calcaire Groasicr of Paris. ^ 



Verona, Vicentine Hills, and Monte Be« 



rici, in the valley of the Po. 

 Loretto, SE of Vienna, in basin of Da^ 



nube. 

 Tout de Moliere, E of Yverdun, in Swii- 



zerland. 

 With plants ard marine fish. 

 Monte Bolca, near Verona. 

 Solenhofen, near Pappenheim (probably]^. 

 Fish of Mount Lebanon (probably). 



3. Plaoii Clay Forma f ion. 



Beds of clay, marl, sand, and gravel, with 



marine shells. 

 Basin of Paris. ' 



AU the edges of the plain of Lombard j ; 



near Parma, Placenza, Asti, Turin, 



Vicenza. 

 VaUey of the Danube. 

 Valley of Geneva and Constance. 



4. Nageljlue^ of Suo'tzerfand, ComOy and 



SaUzOurg. 



Puddingstone, of Rigi, near Ijuceme, and 

 of Bregentz on Lake Constance. 



5. Lignite and Glance Coal. Perfect 



and u^td fn' Fires. 



Monte Bolca and Arzignan in the Vi- 

 centino. Fussen in Bavaria. 



Titmoning, Teisendorf, Miesbach, and aU 

 the coal pits in the Valley of the Da- 

 nube, above Vienna. 



Marburg, in Styiia. 



Leoben, in Styiia. 



