286 



Clara Gould Mark 



THICKNESS 



TOTAL 

 THICKNESS 



Feet 



About a quarter of a mile northeast of Flint Ridge Four Cor- 

 ners a ledge of flint is shown apparently in place at the head of a 

 small gully. The flint on one side of the gully measured ten feet 

 at its thickest place, while the greatest thickness of that on the 

 other side was seven feet and three inches. 



Buzzard Glory Knoh. Two and one-half miles south of Flint 

 Ridge, and just north of the National Pike west of Brownsville, 

 is a high hill to which the name Buzzard Glory Knob is given on 

 the topographic map, and which is locally called Benny Iden's 

 Hill. The top of this hill is composed of an impure argillaceous 

 limestone which lithologically resembles the limestone below the 

 flint near the Flint Ridge Four Corners. There are a good many 

 rather small blocks of flint scattered over the top of the hill, ap- 

 parently the remnant of the flint limestone with which it was 

 formerly capped. Specimens of Fusulina secalica are found in 

 some of these blocks. The impure limestone contains a consider- 

 able number of fossils, and the following species were collected, 

 Chonetes mesolohus being most abundant: 



