548 F. BASCOM 
altitudes. East and northeast of Reading there are many flat- 
topped granite and quartzite hills rising to a height of 1,000 feet, 
the Schooley level in that locality (see Figs. 5-10). On one of these, 
the Schooley remnant is separated from the adjacent Kittatinny 
Fic. 5.—Schooley peneplain above the Honeybrook peneplain in the Boyertown 
quadrangle. The summit of Long Hill in the distance at 1,040 feet represents the 
Schooley peneplain, as seen from a point one-half mile southeast of Shanesville, looking 
south. The summit of the ridge in the foreground is a remnant of the Honeybrook 
peneplain. 
Fic. 6.—Schooley peneplain in the Reading quadrangle. The higher parts of 
the past-maturely dissected upland one and one-half miles southeast of Fleetwood 
represent the Schooley peneplain at an altitude of 940-1,000 feet. Hill road, looking 
south on hills south of Princeton. 
remnant by a steep slope (Fig: 9). In the central Piedmont 
province the Schooley peneplain descends to an altitude of 800 feet 
(Coatesville quadrangle). If the Schooley peneplain reappears 
near the “‘fall-line,” it is found on the border of, and passing 
