WBALDEN GKOCP. 



53 



2, Hastings Sands. — Average thickness 400 to 500 feet. 



Grey, white, fenrn- 

 ginons, and fawn- 

 coloured sand and 

 finable sandstone, • 

 with abundance of 

 small portions of lig- 

 nite. 



Horded Sand. 



Traces of carbonized 

 vegetables. 



Little Horsted,Uck- 



field, Framfield, Bei- 



• hill, Chailey, Fletch- 



ing. Bridge Park, 



Tunbridge Wells, &c. 



Strata of Tilgate Forest. 



Sand, and Griable 

 sandstone, of various 

 shades of green, yel- 

 low, and ferruginous, 

 surface oftentimes 

 deeply furrowed. 



TUgate stone, very 

 fine, compact bluish 

 or greenish grey grit, - 

 in lenticular masses, 

 surface oftentimes 

 covered with mamil- 

 lary concretions : 

 the lower beds fre- 

 quently conglomeri- 

 tic, and containing 

 large quartz pebbles. 



Clay or marl ; of a ^ Bones, and shells but 

 bluish grey colour; I rarely, 

 altematingwith sand, 1 Ferns ; and stems of 

 sandstone, and shale. >- vegetables. J 



Ferns, and stems of 

 v^etables, bones of 

 Saurian animals, Birds, 

 Turtles, Fishes, &c. 

 SheUs of the genera 

 Vnio, Cyclas, Cyrena, 

 Faludina, &c. 



Lisnite wood. 



Loxwood, Horsham^ 

 Tilgate, and St. Leo- 

 nard's Forests ; Chai- 

 ley, Ore near Battle, 

 Hastings, &c., Rye, 

 Winchelsea. 



Worth Sandstone. 

 ■VVTiite and yeUow , Ferus and Amndi- 

 friable sandstone and J naceous plants. Lig- 

 sand. [ nite, &c. 



r3 



idi- .. 



k- 1 



Tunbridge Wells. 



Worth, near Craw- 

 ley, St. Clement's 

 Caves, Hastings, &c. 



