THE GEOLOGIST 



APRIL, 1860. 



GEOLOGICAL L 0 C A L I T I E S. — NO. I. 

 FOLKESTONE. 

 By S. J. Mackie, F.G.S., F.S.A. 



(Continued from jpage 90.) 



What a sliding, slipping, torn, and rugged ruinous Leap is that far- 

 famed Copt Point itself, v/itli its ravines of shattered clay-splinters, 

 and its shivering peaks and promontories. How the rotten clay- 

 breaks and crumbles away beneath your foot-tread, and goes scat- 



Lign. IZ.—Belemnites Listeri. From the Gault. 



tering down in multitudes of leaping, racing, bounding chips on 

 to the hard and sea- worn rocks below. Pyritous casts of Ammo- 

 nites, amber-like Belemnites, and phosphatic casts of Nuculse, with 



VOL. III. Q 



