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THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



building and ballast for railroads, is as intimate as it is possible 

 for any one's to be. But in connection with the engrossing occupa- 





FIG. 1. TALUS REMOVED, so AS TO SHOW THE ORIGINAL CONDITION OF THE PIT A FEW FEET 



BACK FROM THE PLACE WHERE THE IMPLEMENT WAS FOUND, WHICH IS MARKED BY A *. 



tions of his public business, Mr. Huston has maintained his love 

 for pure science, and his valuable aid has been solicited by numer- 

 ous scientific men engaged in making paleontological collections. 

 It was Mr. Huston who discovered for Prof. Samuel H. Scudder 

 the fossil insects of the coal measures which attracted so much 

 attention two or three years ago. Prof. Cope has likewise been 

 greatly indebted to Mr. Huston for fossils collected by him in the 

 neighborhood of Steubenville. The evidence, therefore, is not that 

 of either an unknown or an inexperienced observer. 



2. The Discovery. This I will give in Mr. Huston's own lan- 

 guage, written out for me at my request. 



" PROF. G. F. WRIGHT. " STEUBENVILLE, OHIO, August 13, 1895. 



" MY DEAR SIR : Below Brilliant, Jefferson County, Ohio, is a 

 very fine remnant of high-level river terrace. Its length is two 

 miles and maximum width over a quarter of a mile. On the West 

 Virginia side of the Ohio River at that point the bluffs rise to a 



