Q. J. G. S. vol. xxxix.] 

 Fig. 1. — Verticatf 



So. 



of 



bed 



Thick- 

 ness. 



ft. in. 

 3 



3 

 2 3 



7 



8 



1 

 1 9 

 3-7 



\ To face p. 574. 

 Sands. (Scale J inch to a foot.) 



^d. 



nds, 



aand. — Pal. brevis 



sands. " Eolled-Bone bed." 



ngto 



th rootlets. 



nd, passing to 

 rootlets. 



eous clay, with rootlets, 

 west), "Leaf-bed." 

 |vith pale grey sand layers and ironstone bands; 



[more sandy further east]. 



andy in places, especially further east. 



layer. — Paludina. 



elays, with purplish parts ; also rootlets. 



3' vertebrae, Paludina, Potamomga. 

 ternating with sandy clays, 

 with vegetable matter. 



reen clays. Few fossils. 



with lignite bands, 

 ayer. 



rich in fossils, 

 rootlets, followed by lignitic stiff clay-bed. 



r. — Neritina, Cer. variabiles Dreissena. 



.with ramifying grey marks, sandy. — Mel. fusifor* 



moides, Oliva Branderi. 



rey sandy layers. — M.muricata, Modiola, Dreissena. 



, pleurotomoides ; turtles. 



rey clayey sands. — C. pyrgota, C. pleurotomoides, &c. 



in C. pleurotomoides, Ps. solida, O. Branderi,Cyrena. 



y in places. 



Some fossils in layers. 



