€ 
some half dozen other AS boulders varying in size up 
to several feet in dia er 
A short distance furtaer. to the westward can be seen two 
bon which is pida > its ale E only a ow 
feet, is almost as large. Similar boulders of a smaller sie 
are strewn in the vicinity. It must have been ice of grea 
transporting power that could carry stones of such a size as 
described. 
The cliffs of the Lake near these erratics are about twenty 
oe in Poir and consist intermittently of clay and sand 
change from the one feature to us other is. 
tt very ee; The clay is generally very compact, 
grey in color, with red patches; whilst the dp may be 
colored white, yellow, or a deep brick-red. The stratigraphi- 
cal lines are often very bewildering. In places no bedding 
planes can be detected, and in dan they rapidly alter from 
the horizontal to nearly vertical direction, accompanied with 
contortions 
(d) M ken urlie Lagoon.—This is a long narrow lagoon 
we Ep with the road between Yorketown and Port 
Moorowie. he widest portion of the lagoon is at its sou- 
then. ii and on the eastern side of this larger basin in the 
lake two granite boulders are conspicuous. They are visible 
from the public road at a distance of about a quarter of a 
mile. 
(e) Moorowie Head Station. accor sig about ten miles 
north-west of Yorketown on the e of the Great Swamp 
country. I am indebted to Mr. Matthews, of Yorketown, 
and to Mr. Fowler, of Yararoo, for calling my attention te 
two erratics of granite which occur near this Station. I was | 
unable to visit the locality, but the independent description 
given by the gentlemen named agree in every particular. 
One of the stones referred to measures three feet by eighteen 
inches, and lies on the east side of the main road in Section 
o. 38, Hundred of Moorowie. Mr. Fowler describes it as 
"red granite similar to the granite seen in the cliffs at Cape 
Spencer he second of these boulders is described as 
much pud than the one just referred to, estimated at five 
feet by three feet, lying on the north side of a small lagoon. 
in Section No. 37, about three-quarters of a mile from the 
rst mentioned. 
(f) Lagoon at Pentonvale Head Station.—Mr. Matthews, of 
Yorketown, has a granite boulder in his yard that had been 
brought from the above lagoon as an object of interest. 
