﻿uart. Journ. Gbol. Soc. To face p. 136. 



THE UPPER TERTi 



&c. 



an- 

 d." 

 >sed 

 re" 

 the 

 Di- 

 ms. 

 vith 



and 



dof 

 ain- 

 )cks 

 and 



Thames Area and 



Continental equivalents. 



a freshwater 



2. Drift : effects of corillips . 

 outline of Wealdc 



3. Sub-aerial detritus iktions of 



strict. 



aterworn," 

 malian re- 



a. Wide alluvia of 

 and Brentford (Mj 

 Mole, Wey. Low 

 bury. 



/3. Old terrestrial si f Norfolk 

 tire skeletons of Zj 

 nius beneath diifj 

 Petteridge, &c. 



4 w 



v its 



The outflow of thin portion of 

 Thames into the Us sea at the 

 nearly the same lejd coralline 

 but the volume of 

 greater. 



1. 



a. The continental equivalents of this 

 period are common, from the coast 

 of Denmark to that of Belgium. 

 0. Ditto. 



2. Drift generally spread over N. Eu- 

 rope as low as 50° N. Lat. (Berg- 

 haus*). 



3. Greatest elevation of the Alps, Vos- 

 ges, &c. ; also Pyrenees. 



a. Broad alluvia of Rhine, Rhone, 

 Seine, Loire, and all the conti- 

 nental rivers. 



/3. Rhine and affluents, continued 

 northwards along bed of present 

 German Ocean. 



Physical Atlas, 1836. 



