﻿368 
  F. 
  G. 
  H. 
  PRICE 
  ON 
  THE 
  GATJLT 
  OF 
  FOLKESTONE. 
  

  

  temporaneously 
  with 
  much 
  of 
  the 
  Lower 
  Chalk 
  under 
  different 
  local 
  

   conditions 
  of 
  proximity 
  of 
  land 
  and 
  depth 
  of 
  water. 
  

  

  Mr. 
  Blake 
  believed 
  that 
  the 
  animal 
  of 
  Ammonites 
  rostratus 
  might 
  

   have 
  lived 
  outside 
  its 
  shell. 
  

  

  Mr. 
  Price 
  stated 
  that 
  he 
  did 
  not 
  wish 
  to 
  imply 
  that 
  the 
  divisions 
  

   indicated 
  in 
  his 
  paper 
  would 
  hold 
  good 
  over 
  wide 
  areas. 
  He 
  added 
  

   that 
  bones 
  of 
  Turtle 
  were 
  not 
  unfrequent 
  in 
  the 
  Gault. 
  

  

  Mr. 
  Meter 
  said 
  that 
  the 
  division 
  between 
  the 
  Gault 
  and 
  Green- 
  

   sand 
  was 
  not 
  distinct. 
  The 
  Beer 
  stone 
  deposited 
  in 
  a 
  hollow 
  to 
  the 
  

   westward 
  exhibited 
  a 
  change 
  of 
  texture. 
  The 
  upper 
  beds 
  of 
  the 
  

   Lower 
  Greensand 
  of 
  Folkestone 
  represent 
  a 
  lower 
  horizon 
  of 
  the 
  

   Lower 
  Greensand 
  at 
  Guildford. 
  

  

  