100 THE NOKTH-WEST REGION OF CHAKNWOOD FOREST. 



slate represented in contact with the syenite of the ruins is an error. 

 The discovery of a grit-bed communicated to us, and mentioned on 

 ]). 760, line 47, was announced, as we have since learned, on insuf- 

 iicient evidence. The " greenish slaty ash," described as on the top 

 of Nanpanton, must have referred partly or wholly to what waa 

 afterwards recognized as " greenstone." Pig. 1 in Part III. re- 

 presents the " Sharpley Eock" as if faulted against "coarse agglo- 

 merate." Por this there is no authority ; the mistake was unac- 

 countably made in engraving the woodcut, and unfortunately slipped 

 through the press unnoticed. 



In working for our former papers, we had only the one-inch map. 

 It may assist visitors if we add the following table of names used by 

 us, which are absent from or chauged in the new six-inch map : — ■ 



Blackhrool- ToUgate, now Hinging Hill. 



Blores Hill. A spinney in a field N. of Eradgate Park ; now 

 Warren Hill. 



Broad Hill. The name was used for some outcrops now unnamed, 

 but marked, in a field 300 yards W.N.W. of the wall round 

 Patch et Hill. 



Hanging Bodes, near Woodhouse. Marked on the one-inch map 

 as Hanging Stones, and on the six-inch as Hanging- Stone 

 Hills. 



Hanging Stones, east of the Monastery. Now Plat Hills, one 

 spot being marked as " the Hangingstone." 



High Toivers. The moorland E. of the Porest-Eock Hotel. Xow 

 Warren Hill. 



Holgate Hill. In Eradgate Park, E. of Old John Hill. Now 

 unnamed. The name is now applied to a spinney beyond 

 the park- wall, but is spelled Hallgate. 



Kidney Plantation. East of Lubcloud, west of Pound HiU. Un- 

 named. 



Moorley Hill. Unnamed. The quarries are indicated 700 yards 

 S. of Sheepshed Station, E. of Morley Parm. 



New Cliff. Now Newhurst Plantation. 



Stable Quarry, in Eradgate Park. A pit in the knoll across the 

 brook, S. of the ruins. The buildings were pulled down 

 some forty years ago, and the name may be of our own 

 coining, but it is convenient for reference. 



Steivard^s Hay. Now Eradgate House. 



Stevjard's Hay Spring. Unnamed. The shallow pit with quartz- 

 grit is faintly indicated in the west corner of a field, bounded 

 by Ladyhay Wood on the east, and the woods round Eradgate 

 House on the north. 



Tin Meadow. Unnamed. In our papers the name is used to 

 denote a spot 5 mile N. of the Porest-Eock Hotel. 



