Ch. IX] TABULAR VIEW OF FOSSILIFEROUS STRATA. 



105 



4. 



Periods and Groups. 



OLDER 

 PLIOCENE. 



Britisli Examples Foreign Equivalents and Synonyms. 



f Subapennine strata, p. 173. 

 Red Crag of Suffolk, pp. 168-170. I Hills of Rome, Monte Mario, &c 

 Coralline crag of Suffolk, pp. 168- < p. L 5, and p. 531. 

 171 I Antwerp and Normandy crag, p. 



173. 

 I Aralo-Caspian deposits, p. 175. 



C. MIOCENE. 



C. Terrains Tertiaires mot- 

 ens, PARTIE SUPER1EURE ; OB 



5. MIOCENE. 



D. EOCENE. 



6. UPPER EOCENE 

 (Lower Miocene of 



many authors}. 



Marine strata of this age wanting 



in the British Isles. 

 Leaf-bed of Mull in the Hebrides ? 



p. 179. 

 Lignite of Antrim ?, p. 180. 



Hempstead beds, near Yarmouth, 

 Isle of Wight, p. 192. 



T. MIDDLE EOCENE. 



1. Bembridge, or Binstead Beds, 

 Isle of Wight, p. 208. 



2. Osborne or St. Helen's Series, 

 p. 210. 



3. Headon Series. Ibid. 



4. Headon Hill Sands, and Bar- 

 ton Clay, p. 212. 



5. Bagshot and Bracklesham 

 Beds, p. 213. 



6. Wanting? Seep. 222. 



8. LOWER EOCENE. 



HT. SECONDARY. 

 K CRETACEOUS. 



§ Upper Cretaceous. 

 f 



f 1. London Clay and Bognor Beds, 

 ' p. 216. 



2. Plastic and Mottled Clays and 

 Sands, and Woolwich Beds, p. 

 219. 



3. Thanet Sands, p. 221. 



Falunien supfirieur, D'Orbigny. 



Faluns of Touraine, p. 175. 



Part of Bourdeaux beds, p. 178. 



Bolderberg strata in Belgium, p. 

 178. 



Part of Vienna basin, p. 179. 



Part of Molasse, Switzerland, p. 

 179. 



Sands of James River, and Rich- 

 mond, 'V irginia, United States. 

 p. 181. 



Lower part of Terrain Tertiaire 



Moyen. 

 Calcaire Lacustre SupGrieur and 



Ores de Fontainebleau, p. 194. 

 Part of the Lacustrine strata of 



Auvergne, p. 194. 

 Kleyu Spawen or Limburg beds, 



Belgium— Rupelian and Tong- 



rian systems of Dumont, p. 188. 

 Mayence basin, p. 190. 

 Part of brown-coal of Germany, 



pp. 191, 540. 

 Hermsdorf tile-clay near Berlin. 



p. 189. 



1. Gypseous Series of Montmartre, 

 and Calcaire lacustre supfirieur, 

 p. 223. 



2 & 3. Calcaire Siliceux, p. 225. 

 2 & 3. Gres de Beauchamp, or 



Sables Moyens, p. 226. Laecken 



beds, Belgium. 

 i & 5. Upper and Middle Calcaire 



Grossier, p. 226. 

 5. Brnxellien, or Brussels beds of 



Dumont. 

 5. Lower Calcaire Grossier, or 



Glauconie Grossiere, p. 228. 



5. Claiborne beds, Alabama, 

 United States, p. 232. 



5 & 6. Nummulitic formation ol 

 Europe, Asia, &c, p. 229. 



6. Soissonnais Sands, or Lits Co- 

 quilliers, p. 228. 



1 1. Wanting in Paris basin, occurs 

 at Cassel, in French Flanders. 



2. Argile Plastique et Lignite, p. 

 229. 



3. Lower Landenian of Belgium 

 in part?, p. 235. 



III. Terrains Secondaires. 

 E. Terrains Cretacees. 



9. 



MAESTRICHT 

 BEDS. 



10. TIPPER 



WHITE CHALK. 



11. LOWER 



WHITE CHALK. 



13. UPPER 



GREENSAND. 



Wanting in England. 



f 



(White Chalk with Flints, of North 

 and South Downs, p. 240. 



Chalk without Flints, and Chalk 



Marl, p. 239. 

 Chalk Marl. Ibid. 



f Loose sand with bright green 

 ' grains, p. 250. 



Firestone of Merstham, Surrey, 

 ibid. 



Marly Stone with Chert, Isle of 

 I Wight. 



f 9. Danien of D'Orbigny. 



I Calcaire pisolitique, near Paris, 



J p. 235. 



I Maestricht Beds, p. 237. 



I Coralline Limestone of Faxoe io 



I Denmark, p. 238. 



f 10. Senonien, D'Orbigny. 



I Craie blanche avec si lex. 



! Obere Kreide of the Germans. 



] Upper Quadersandstein ? of the 



same. 

 (. La Scaglia of the Italians. 



f Calcaire a. hippurites, Pyrenees. 

 I Turouien, D'Orbigny, or, Craie 

 tuf'eau of Touraine. 

 Craie argileuse of some French 



writers. 

 Upper Planerkalk of Saxony. 



(" Gres vert supfirieur. 

 Glauconie crayeuse. 

 I Craie chlorit£e. 

 | Cenomanien, D'Orbigny. 

 j Lower Quadersandstein of the 

 i. Germans. 



