372 W. E. Logan on the Rocks of the Quebec Group. 
regretted and talented young scientific friend, Mr. John Head, 
and myself, the first collection of fossils obtained by the Survey 
at Point Lévis. These were taken from the whitish limestone 
masses associated with the bed, where it crosses the fief Ste. 
Anne, and the opinion in regard to them expressed oy Mr. Bil- 
lings induced me to instruct Mr. Bell to washes a further collec- 
tion on the same band. In addition to the fossils collected by 
and as they have been by Mr. M . 
boulders, lying on the superficial soil, while he carries them 
away from their true site, and approximates their position to the 
lime-kiln of the Redoute, in ant to affiliate them to mass, 
it will be necessary for me to describe their mode of occurrence. 
On the fief Ste. Anne, the band 8 (A?) dips to the southeast 
ata high angle. It is from about twenty to twenty-five feet 
thick in its caleareo-magnesian base it holds a great many 
of yellowish-white limestone, in which fossils are 
Tent and somewhat abundant. It is underlaid by slates ; — od - 
some parts a sudden step to the underlying slates occurs 
