found on the land of Edward Toffin, in the southern part of Section 25, 

 where the geologic section below was measured : l 



Ft. in. 



Coal blossom, Tionesta 1 



Covered 40 



Ore, Sand Block . 4 



Covered 133 



Shale, blue 10 



Shale, blue, tough, lower part fossiliferous] { 2 



Coal, good 



Coal, bony 



Shale, black, carbonaceous 



Bear Run 1 . . 3 



6 



In Lick Township, several miles northeast of Jackson, the same 

 fossil occurs in the fissile shales and black band ore interbedded with 

 the coal. In the western part of Section 21, at the mouth of an old 

 coal mine on the land of D. D. Evans, good collecting material is sup- 

 plied by the piles of shale thrown out from the mine. The section 

 below was made at this place: 2 



Ft. in. 



Shale 35 



Coal, part cannel ] \ 1 8 



Bone, shale, tough, fissile I j . . 8 



Ore, black band f Bear Run ] . . 10 



Bone, shale, tough, fissile j [ . . 4 



Black band ore with Naiadites elongata is exposed in the stream 

 bed on the property of Mrs. John Butts in the central part of Section 5. 

 The material is shaly, red or gray in color, and slabs containing fossils 

 can be obtained easily from the stream bed. The following members 

 constitute the geologic section, here: 3 



Ft. in. 

 Shale, dark .... 4 



Coal, cannel nature 



Shale. . 



9 

 2 



Bear Run t . 2 



Coal, cannel 



Ore, black band, fossiliferous 



Coal, bituminous 



Sandstone 4 



Shale 10 



Coal blossom 3 



Shale, blue, sandy 3 9 



Shaly sandstone, plant marked 1 3 



Shale, sandy, with carbonate ore nodules 5 10 



Coal, bony 1 ( . . 4 



Coal, good j Quakertown \. . 9 



Vinton County. The black band ore above the Bear Run coal 

 is sparingly fossiliferous on Elk Fork, in the western part of Section 6, 

 Elk Township. The ore occurs about 100 feet below the Lower 



!Stout, W., Geol. Surv. Ohio, Fourth Ser., Bull. 20, p. 116, 1916. 

 zldem, p. 121. 

 "Idem, p. 122. 



21 



