receives from the south, in the central part of Section 22, Hamilton 

 Township. Excellent collecting is afforded from the bed of the stream 

 below the house of Phillip Meldick, as the fossils are abundant, well 

 preserved, and easily obtained. The deposit is buff or red in color, 

 coarse-grained, siliceous, and filled with numerous soft, decomposed 

 pebbles, resembling to a marked extent the Sharon ore above. The 

 collection of fossils from this locality is the only one made from the 

 Harrison ore. These fossils were not found in fragments of older 

 Mississippian rock enclosed in the Harrison ore, and therefore are 

 distinctly of Pennsylvanian age. The following section was measured 

 here: l 



Ft. In. 



Sandstone, coarse-grained, ferruginous .. } Sharon f 1 10 



Shale, blue [ conglomerate \ . . 1 



Sandstone, coarse-grained, ferruginous ... J equivalent [ 1 10 



Ore, composed of small nodules, Harrison 10 



Clay shale, light 2 



Sandstone, with parts covered ) fl5 



Shale, soft, yellowish J Logan \ 1 6 



The fossils collected from the Harrison ore at this locality are 

 listed below. 



Crinoid segments 



Orbiculoidea stoutella n.sp. 



Orbiculoidea capuliformis (McChesney)? 



Schizophoria sp. 



Spiriferina kentuckyensis (Shumard)? 



Hustedia mormoni (Marcou) 



Composita subtilita (Hall) 



Nucula subrotundata Girty mss. 



Nucula beyrichi von Schauroth 



Nuculopsis ventricosa (Hall) 



Parallelodon tenuistriatus (Meek and Worthen) 



Myalina pernaformis Cox var. 



Schizodus affinis Herrick 



Schizodus subcircularis Herrick 



Aviculoptecten coxanus Meek and Worthen 



Bellerophon crassus Meek and Worthen? 



Euphemus carbonarius (Cox) 



Pleurotomaria ornatiformis n.sp. 



Pleurotomaria, three or more species, undet, 



Schizostoma catilloides (Conrad) 



Sphaerodoma humilis (Keyrs)? 



Muskingum County. The section below, measured on the land 

 of Frank Fink, southeastern part of Section 13, Hopewell Township, 

 shows the character of the member in Muskingum County as well 

 as its relation to the underlying Maxville limestone. 2 



Pottsville formation Ft. In. 



Shale, blue 3 



Shale, dark, fissile 10 



'Stout, W., Geol. Surv. Ohio, Fourth Ser., Bull. 20, p. 29, 1916. 

 *Stout, W., Geol. Surv. Ohio, Fourth Ser., Bull. 21, p. 49, 1918. 



11 



