-o02 Canadian Record of Science. 



22. Greenish, flinty, argillaceous and siliceous 



flags, micaceous, and sometimes spotted 



with red, containing much carbonaceous ft. in. 



matter, and cut by veins of quartz. (jSTo. 3) ?> 0' 



23. Greenish, coherent, massive, fine sandstone, 



in two layers -1 



24. Eed and greeni.sh mottled shale, in regular 



layers, more massive towards the top, for 



the most part red 8 



25. Eeddish, coherent flags and argillaceous shale 32 



26. Red, crumbly, argillaceous shale, not well 



seen 11 0' 



27. Red, crumbly, argillaceous shale, with harder 



bands, not well seen 10 9 



28. Red, argillaceous shale, with flaggy layers . . 17 6 



29. Red, argillaceous shale, not well seen 25 



30. Red, coherent, thick bedded sandstone, in 



two layers, at a small waterfall 6 



31. Red, coherent, argillaceous shale, with green 



layers and blotches 5 



o^ 



Measures not well seen, but evidently chiefly 



red 6 



33. Greenish, argillaceous shale, at the mouth of 



a little brook from the westward. (]S[o. 4.) 

 From this, the seeds and plants^ were 

 obtained by Dr. Ami in 1896. One 

 coarse, rusty layer is full of pyrites and 

 plant remains 2 



34. Measures concealed, probably greenish shales 



cut by quartz veins and containing plants 3 



35. Greenish quartzite or fine sandstone, over 



which the little brook from tlie westward 

 falls into the main stream at water level 3 



1 Fi'oni a mitMOseopic exaiiiiii;iti(in recently nindedf ilie peculiar objects In question, 

 referred to in No. 33 of tlie SBOlion as "seeds and jilants," the writer is of the opinion, 

 that there is no evidence of the presence of such organisms. 



