VOL. XVII. (I) INFERIOR OOLITE— SOUTH COTTESWOLDS 



Struckntanni-'Beds 

 Pedicum-Beds 



Section at Bitckholt Wood — continued 



Thickness in feet inches 



6. Light yellow soft stone ; Pseudogrammo- 

 ceras doerntense (Denckm.) . . . . 09 



7. "Linseed-Bed." Brownish marl with 

 numerous dark brown grains. Pseudo- 



granimoceras cotteswoldicB, S.B. (xxxv., 

 4 to 6 : misprint bed 6 in explanation 



of plate) 07 



Striatuhtm-Beds 8. Yellowish stone with brown grains; 

 Grammoceras striatulum (Sowerby), 

 abundant . . . . • • ..06 



This bed lies above, and fills the inter- 

 stices of the very uneven-topped 

 Variabilis-Beds g. Hard, blue-hearted sandstone; Cana- 



varella?arenacea,S.B.{yix.vm.,20&2i) i 3 

 10. Yellow micaceous sands 



At 4j miles from Stroud is a quarry in a field on the right- 

 hand side of the road, which may be called the " Stanley- Wood 



Quarry." 



Stanley-Wood Quarry 



1. Limestone, obscurely-oolitic, rather 

 sandy -looking : seen . . . . ..40 



2. Limestone, shelly, ironstained ; a few 

 oysters adhering to its upper surface o 4 



Ragstone, shelly; crowded with Trigoni a 

 costata, Sovf. .. .. .. .. 1 11 



4. Rubbly ragstone . . . . . . ..02 



5. Ragstone, the median portion crowded 



with A canthothyris spinosa (Schloth.), 

 Rhynchonella spp. . . . . . . i 10 



6. Parting . . . . . . . . o oj 



7. Ragstone, massive, shelly ; usual fossils 3 2 

 No}i -sequence. Beds VII. to XXI. {incl.) 



wanting. 

 XXII. Lower Free- 8. Limestone, massive, top-portion slightly 



stone bored : seen . . . . . . ..60 



Workings on the same side of the road further along, and 

 in Pen Wood, all show the Upper Trigonia-Gui resting upon 

 the Lower Freestone — no beds in between. 



By the path-side, close to the cottage at the foot of the 

 northern slope of Pen Hill, is the site of the Pen-Wood Section 

 of Mr Buckman. The section was only a temporary one, an 

 excavation being made and then filled up. However, Messrs 

 Buckman and Charles Upton obtained a number of fossils 

 therefrom, and the former geologist has supplied me with the 

 appended record of the beds which were revealed.' 



I " In the original section Beds 2 to 4 were called ' Opalinum-Zone,' Bed 4 bieing ' Opalinum- 

 Zone, Moorei-Beds ' ; Beds 5109' Dumortieria- and Dispaiisum-BeAs ' \ Beds 10 and 1 1 ' Slriatulum- 

 Beds.' These details will explain the horizons given in the earlier part of the Monograph." — S. S. 

 Buckman (in lift.) 



III. Clypeus-Gnt 



V. Horizon of 2. 

 Dundry Freestone 

 VI. Upper Tri- 3. 

 gon»a-Grit 



