510 Percy F. Kendall — Brockrams of Vale of Eden, 



men who used domestic animals and marine molluscs, and had 

 implements of iron, bronze, and polished stone, and who, in the 

 earlier part of this period, were contemporaneous with the reindeer 

 and probably with the bear. 



In the subjacent clay there are evidences, left during a previous 

 epoch, that bears then inhabited the cave undisturbed by human 

 intrusion. 



Tabular Statement of the Mammalian Uemains (Preliminary). 



IX. — On the Beockrams of the Vale of Eden, and the Evidence 



THET AFFOKD OF AN InTER-PeRMIAN MOVEMENT OF THE PENNINE 



Faults.^ 



By Percy F, Kendall, F.G.S. 



THE author has been engaged during occasional visits to the Vale 

 of Eden in the study of the well-known Brockram conglomerates 

 vehich form so conspicuous an element in the Poikilitic series of the 

 district. Tentative results obtained five or six years ago have been 

 fully confirmed by later observations, and though the investigation 

 is not quite complete, the author regards the present occasion as 

 an opportune one for presenting a preliminary statement of views 

 ■which have already obtained some currency by annual demonstrations 

 in the field to scientific societies of the North of England. 



The stratigraphical relations of the Brockrams can be well studied 

 in the almost continuous sections which are exposed between Hoff 

 Beck, two miles west of Appleby, and Brackenber Common, three 



1 Abstract of a paper read before the British Associatiou, Belfast, September, 1902, 

 in Section C (Geology) . 



