66 Proceedings. 
Road with Nutfield Lane. Here the Folkestone Sand is seen, 
and resting on it is a doubtful bed, which is either the base of 
the Gault or the top of the Folkestone Sand. It contained 
phosphatic nodules. 
ft. in. 
ft. in. 
0 6 Surface soil. | 0 6 
| 
Jao Brown Drift. | 
} 5 0 
Whitish marly 
9 8 bands, with 
Flint gravel 
at base. 
Folkestone 
Sands. 6 0 
Base not seen. 
Section in Frenches Pit, 20° S. of E. 
October 7, 1898.—M. C. C. 
The party now climbed on to the new railway and examined 
the deep cutting in the Gault and Upper Greensand. The 
Gault contains here Foraminifera and Entomostraca, which are 
visible with a lens. In the Upper Greensand some harder 
layers of a siliceous character were noticed. Examination shows 
that the bands consist largely of sponge-spicules. 
From here the Members rapidly melted away, few remaining 
to. examine the tunnels by means of which the Greensand beds 
are worked, or to visit the fine chalk-pit a little farther north. 
, 
. 
} 
. 
} 
