472 NEW SOUTH WALES. 
2 feet—Same as D. 
3 feet.—Same as E, 
6 feet.—Thin alternations of D and E, E predominating. 
13 feet.—Same as E, with thin layers of D. 
1 foot.—Same as F. 
6 inches.—Same as E. 
5% feet (II.) Coat. 10 inches, bituminous coal. 
4 inches, clay. 
18 inches, coal. 
2 inches, clay. 
2 inches, coal. 
2 inches, clay. 
2 inches, coal. 
18 inches, clay. 
10 inches, black coaly shale. 
2 feet.—Soft clay. 
18 feet.—Grayish-blue sandstone, containing clayey layers, one or two thin seams of 
coal in clay, ferruginous nodules, and fissures lined with ironstone. The sandstone 
is a little argillaceous, and crumbles on exposure ; some of it breaks into concentric 
Jaminee. 
6 feet.—Same bluish sandstone as preceding, but more fissured ; the ferruginous walls to 
fissures are from a fourth to half an inch thick. 
5 feet.—Fine and soft clayey sandstone. 
6 feet (III.)—Coat, with thin seams of clay ; one layer of two feet, clear coal. 
5 feet.—Same as E, with layers of F. 
4 feet.—Mostly same as D; with numerous ferruginous fissures and thin beds of clay 
ironstone. This layer passes into— 
12 feet—Same as D, with thin ferruginous layers; hard, but becomes clayey and soft, 
for eighteen inches over the following layer. 
53 feet (IV.) Coat. 1 foot, bituminous coal, shaly above ; lower six 
inches pure. 
2 to 3 inches, dirt-brown clay. 
8 inches, coal. 
6 inches, white clay, very soft. 
4 inches, good coal. 
12 inches, clay, with thin seams of coal. 
18 inches, good coal. 
20 feet—Bluish clay, schistose, passing into bluish argillaceous sandstone, which is 
more or less schistose. A few thin beds of ironstone and trunks of trees, mostly 
ironstone. 
6 feet—Compact hard sandstone. 
6 feet.—Bluish sandstone with clayey layers ; thin layers of deposition apparent ; imper- 
fectly schistose. 
10 feet.—Compact hard argillaceous sandstone of a bluish colour. 
3 feet (V.) Coax; situated at low-water mark. 
