ON SOMK SUFFOLK WELLS. 



437 



I 



1887. The Geology of the Country around Halesworth and Harleston, 

 pp. 36-39. 



1890. The Geology of the Country near Yarmouth and Lowestoft, 

 p. 83. 



1890. The Pliocene Deposits of Britain, p. 110. 



1891. The Geology of Parts of Cambridgeshire and of Suffolk, pp. 114- 

 119. 



1893. The Geology of South-western Norfolk and of Northern 

 Cambridgeshire, pp. 161-164. 



Clare. Snow Hill [half a mile N. of the Church), hy the roadside, 1894. 

 About 176| feet above Ordnance Datum. 

 Made and communicated by Mr. G. Ingold. 

 Water rose to 15^ feet from the surface. 



r r. 1 1 1 f White clay 

 [Glacial Drift] ^°''^'^^' ^^'^^ [ Brown clay 

 [ Ked and green sand . 

 Chalk, very rotten, ( Soft brown chalk 

 and with very few < Soft white chalk 



tiints I Harder white chalk . 



Haverhill. Waterivorks, Camps Road, 1894. 



Nearly 297 feet above Ordnance Datum. 



Made and communicated by Mr. G. Ikgold. 



Shaft, 103 feet ; the rest bored, 

 exceeding 150 gallons a minute. 



Water-level, 73| feet down. 



Yield 



Mould 



. Brown sandy loam 

 I White boulder clay 

 [Drift] \ Blue clay . 



Blue and brown clay 

 \ Chalk and clay . 

 Upper Chalk, with flints (especially from 130 to | 

 230 feet down) / 



HiTCHAM. 



Communicated by the Rev. E. Hill, from information from Mr. Cobbold, 



well-sinker. 



The Hall. About 175 feet above Ordnance Datum. Well 60 feet deep. 



f Blue clay. 

 [Drift] -j Brighter clay and marl. 



[ Sand and consolidated flint-pebble-bed, from which the water comes. 



The Rectory. About 235 feet above Ordnance Datum. Well 102 or 

 103 feet deep. At 100 feet a ' fault ' (so-called) of hard sand, from which 

 the water comes. [Drift.] 



Squirrel's Farm. Eastern end of parish. Well said to be 100 feet 

 deep, all in [Boulder] clay. 



