VOL. XV. (3) EXCURSION—WICKWAR & HAWKESBURY 195 
Indications of the Fullers’ Earth abound. The clay is seen by the 
road-side nearly as far down as the 600-foot contour-line, when white 
oolitic limestones are to be observed beneath it. This limestone has 
been worked in a long-disused quarry on the knoll above Knott’s 
Brake, and caps the section in the present quarry by the road. 
HAWKESBURY-MONUMENT QUARRY Thickness in 
4 ‘ Feet inches 
’ 1. Clay, greenish-grey. Has fille -in cracks in 
Futters’ Fanta { the White Lisetone ane 
(2. Limestone, white, oolitic, seen in quarry about 
‘¢ Wurre LIMESTONE” 1 6': add 4' Ce. ae ans & 10 o 
3. Fairly regular deposit of rubble and calcite fa) I 
(4. Massive bed of hard shelly limestone with 
large oolite-granules: Zerebratula globata, 
Sowerby, Pecten (Syncyclonema) demissus, 
| Phillips, Pecten (Camptonectes) sp... aaNis: fc) 
5. Parting ....... evn Poe Aah Hae A Mee fc) I 
‘¢ Crtypeus-Grit” 4 6. Limestone, hard, shelly, with an even top but 
irregular base: 15” tO TZ” — anne om I 4 
7. Rubbly limestone, mixed with brown shale 6 
8. Obscurely oolite limestone, irregularly bedded 
with alternations of shale ; 4 4 
g. Shaly, very much iron-shot limestone 2 2 
to. Brown, well iron-shot, dense limestone ; 
Ctenostreon  pectiniforme (Schlotheim), 
Limatula aff. gibbosa (Sowerby), Lima 
Lycetti, Laube, Ostrea, Terebratula elobata, 
Sow., Jer. cf. globata, Sow., Acanthothyris 
spinosa (Schlotheim), Pentacrinus-ossicles, 
Galeolaria socialis, Goldfuss, Serpula, 
Uprer 7RIGONIA-GRIT 
ooo 
Berenicea, sp. indet. 4 6 
Dower, LIMESTONE rz. Limestone, hard, coarsely-oolitic, top well- 
planed, bored, and oyster-covered : seen 3 o 
Bed 9 is only provisionally grouped with the so-called Clypeus- 
Grit. Its lithic structure connects it with the Upper Zrigonza-Grit, 
but at the several localities where it has been noticed it has been 
observed to rest upon an oyster-covered and often bored surface of 
the underlying beds. From the equivalent stratum near Nailsworth, 
has been obtained Zerebratula subspheroidalis, Upton, At a lower 
level than the quarry, in the hill-side to the north of the road, the 
Dumorticria- and Moorei-Beds are exposed and below them in another 
opening the Cotteswold Sands. 
Lunch was taken in a/ fresco fashion in the grounds of the Monu- 
ment, after which Mr J. N. Hobbs, of Cheltenham, was elected a 
Member and Messrs S. J. Coley and J. G. Wenden were proposed. 
The President then drew attention to the desirability of preparing a 
Flora for Gloucestershire (see page 172). 
Some of the Members ascended the Monument and obtained a 
magnificent view over the surrounding country. 
The drive was then continued to Kilcott, where at their pleasantly 
situated bungalow, Mr Hannam-Clark and his daughter very kindly 
Seber the Members at tea, after which they drove to Charfield 
tation. 
