SHULIE TO SPICER COVE (1). — FLETCHER. 507 



Ft. In. 



131. Gray and rustv sandstone irregularly be'dded; 



patches of fine conolonierate in lenticular masses 

 sometimes six feet thick 15 ^ 



132. Ked argillaceous shale and sandstone. Dip 



N. 66° E. < 12° 16 



133. Light gray and gi-eenish flaggy sandstone 6 



134. Light greenish and Iduish gray argillaceous and 



arenaceous shale 3 6 



135. Re 1 marl 2 



136. Dark gray argillaceous shale 5 



137. Red and greenish, more or less concretionary 



rubbly shale 5 



138. Red and greenish mottled argillaceous flag 4 



139. Red and greenish argillaceous shale 5 6 



1-10. Reddish and greenish coherent sandstone, very 



fine and argillaceous 1 



141. Re.l marl with dark-greenish blotches and shaly 



layers 9 



142. Greenish and gray very fine wavy sandstone and 



shale ^..\ 1 



143. Greenish and liuht gray very fine sandstone, full 



of carbonized plants 6 



144. Gray, coarse, pebbly sandstone and conglomerate. . 26 



145. Red marl with harder layers 17 6 



146. Greenish fine argillaceous sandstone in flaggy and 



shaly layers 4 6 



147. Light gray and rusty jointed sandstone of flne tex- 



ture with broken plants, wavy, with lenticular 

 patches of coal 17 0' 



148. A lenticular layer of coal and pyrite in bands ; from 



four to two inches thick 3 



149. Gray, rusty-weathering, irregularly bedded sand- 



stone, with patches of conglomerate and wedges of 

 coal. ^lany of the sandstones are false-bedded 

 and hard to measure 20 0- 



