742 W. F. CUMMINS 



Camp Creek. — About four miles west of Tit Mountain. It was 

 named from the fact that Harrold Brothers had one of their line 

 camps on it. At this place appears the first limestone as we go up the 

 south side of the Big Wichita River. It is one of Dr. C. A. White's 

 invertebrate localities. 



Big Wichita. — Going west from Camp Creek and before reaching 

 the locality designated as Military Crossing, there is an exposure of 

 the beds given as No. 29 in the Section on p. 403, Second Annual 

 Report Texas Geological Survey. This is not " Big Wichita " of Boll's 

 collections. He used the term for various localities along the river. 



Fossils: Eryops sp., Clepsy drops leptocephalus, T hero pleura 

 retroversa 



Moonshine. — A small creek that runs into the Big Wichita River 

 near the east line of Baylor County has the name of Moonshine. At 

 this place I found a few vertebrate fossils. 



Fossils : Chilonyx rapidens, Dimetrodon gigas 



Military Crossing. — Before there were any other roads through 

 this country or crossings on the* Big Wichita River, Maj. Van Dorn 

 made a road from Fort Belknap to old Fort Radminski, at the western 

 end of the Wichita Mountains near Otter Creek. This road crossed 

 the north fork of the Little Wichita River near its head. It crossed 

 the Big Wichita River at the eastern foot of the hills a little west of 

 north of Fulda and near where, at a later date, the west line of the 

 "99" pasture fence was built. This crossing has been abandoned 

 for a great number of years and the locality must not be confused with 

 the old cattle trail made several years later, nor the county road made 

 between the two crossings at a still later date. About one and a 

 half miles north of this crossing, on the Big Wichita River, is a small 

 dry creek. On the north side of that creek, about one-fourth of a 

 mile from the old road, is the locality known as Military Crossing. 

 This horizon is near the top of the Wichita Division. This locality 

 furnished the greater number of the invertebrates collected by Dr. 

 White. 



In addition to the forms given under the above localities, the 

 following were collected within the area occupied by the Wichita 

 division, but the localities are not given closely enough to permit their 

 being referred to any definite horizon: Zatrachys seratus, Eryops 



