42 MR. W. WHITAKER ON SOME [Feb. I903, 



the bore-pipe. Supply plentiful. In the well there was plenty of 

 water from the ' coprolite white sand ; ' but it smelt badly, and was 

 not fit for use. 



Thickness. Depth. 

 Feet. Feet. 



[Boulder-Clay.] Clay 49 49 



[Drift? & Crag.] 'Coprolite white sand' 50 99 



ri - r. { London Clay 50 149 



[London Clay, [? Basement f bed>] Green gand> 



00 reec. j j similar to turnip-seed 6 155 



[Reading Beds, j Yellow clay 25 180 



40 feet.] [ Green sand, as above 15 195 



Chalk 29 224 



This does not agree with the short note reproduced in the 



Geological Survey Memoir on ' The Geology of Woodbridge/ 



p. 50 (1886), which makes the depth to the Chalk 100, and in the 

 Chalk 90 feet. The above more detailed account is presumably 

 the more correct. The water was condemned on analysis. 



Brettenham Park. By some outbuildings west of the Hall. 1901. 



Communicated by Mr. T. C T. Warner, M.P. (from a statement 

 which was given him by the borers), with some notes from the 

 llev. Edwin Hill. 



About 280 feet above Ordnance-datura. 



Shaft 139 feet, the rest bored. An excellent supply of water, to 

 within 140 feet of the surface. 



Thickness. Depth. 

 Feet. Feet. 



( Blue Boulder-Clay, with chalk-stones. A spe- 

 cimen from the depth of 130 feet slightly 



brownish 141 141 



j Bough red sand 16 157 



j Loam-sand with grey cloy 5 162 



I Fine red running sand 30 1 92 



■{ Grey clay mixed with red sand 6 198 



I Rough red sand with shells ; some water with 



a bad smell 15 213 



Hard rocky substance 4 217 



1 r* 1~ „<- — k oo. 



[Glacial 

 Drift.] 



I Conglomerates 5 222 



j Plastic clay with flints (apparently Boulder- 



1, Clay) ' 90' 312 



Chalk and occasional beds of flint 232 544 



-fi i This is of interest in showing a great thickness of Drift, the 

 greatest I think recorded in the county. The site, in the midst of 

 a wide tract of Boulder-Clay, is one where naturally the Chalk 

 would be expected to be at a considerable depth, but not nearly so 

 much as 312 feet. 



Bungay. For the Parish Council. Since 1895. 



Bored and communicated by Messrs. LeGrand & Sutcliff. 

 45 feet above Ordnance-datum. Water-level 28| feet down. 



