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for the chp^li of three Inches, ue find Leaves, for the 
moft part Oaken, that appear fair to the Eye, but will 
not bear a I’ouch, This Stratum we End Ibmetimes in- 
terrupted with Heaps of Seed, that Teem to- be Broom 
or Furze- Seed : Nay, in one Place I faw, what appear- 
ed to me to be GoofebtjTks and Currants: In other 
Places in the lame Stratum we find Sea- weed, and other 
things as odd to be at that depth *. Under this appears 
a Stratun^ ol blue Clay, of half a Foot thick, iully 
mixt with Shells ; this we look upon to be good Marie, 
•and throw it up as (uch ; Then appears the right Marie, 
commonly 2, or 4 Foot deep, and in fome Places much 
deeper, which looks like buried Lime, or the Lime that 
Tanners throw out of their Lime-Pits, only that it is 
full-mixt with Shells : Thefe are fmall Perriwinkles, 
fudi as the Scots call Frejh Water^Wilks ; tlio’ there are 
among them abundance of round red Perriwinkles, fuch 
as 1 have often feen thrown out on the Sea-Shore. A- 
mong this Marie, and often at the bottom of it, we 
End very great Horns, which we, for want of ano- 
ther Name, call Elk-Horr?s : Where they joyn the 
Head, they are thick and round ,• and at tint Joyning 
there growls out a Branch of about a Foot long, that 
Teems to have hung juil: over the Bead’s Eyes . It grows 
round above this for about a Foot and fome odds ; 
then fpreads broad, which ends in Brandies, long and 
round, turning with a fmall Bend. The Labourers are 
commonly jo bufie, that they rarely bring them up 
whole ; yet I have one pretty well,- of which I fend 
you an Icon, K Fig. done as W’d! as I could, but not fo 
nice as I could w'ilh. We have alfo found Shanks and 
Owher Bones oi thefe Beads in the fame Place. 
I am, &c. 
FINIS, 
James Kelly. 
