Geological Relations of the East of Ireland . 119 
7. Monavoullagh and Knodkmildown 
Mountains, with general notices 
of these ranges, § 144. 
8. South-eastern quarter of the county 
of Waterford, § 145. 
9. Southern quarter of the county of 
Wexford, with detached portions 
in the interior of this county, and 
in the Saltee islands, § 146, 147. 
10. Waterford harbour, and Slievena- 
man group to the north-eastern 
termination of the sandstone, § 150 
to § 151. 
11. Isolated portions in the interior of 
the limestone field, § 152. 
General observations, § 153. 
% FIRST FLOETZ LIMESTONE. 
General observations of colour, 
structure, composition, and association ; 
position ; distribution ; average thick- 
ness ; interstrati fied with hornstone, 
lydian stone, flinty slate, slate clay, 
swinestone, calp, clayslate conglome- 
rate, limestone conglomerate, magne- 
sian limestone, brown spar, trap, and 
porphyry, § 154 to § 157. 
Description of, 
1. Part of the coast of the county of 
Dublin, § 158 to § 165. 
2. Contact with older rocks in the inte- 
rior, § 166. 
3. Patches in the county of Wexford, 
§ 167. 
4. Association of the limestone with 
brown spar, § 168. 
5. Association of the limestone with trap 
and porphyry. 
a. in Croghan Hill, King’s County, 
§169. 
b. in the Kildare range, § 170. 
c. in the district of Pallis and Caher- 
conlish, county of Limerick, 
§ 171 to §178. 
Comparison with the mountain lime- 
stone of Derbyshire, North of England, 
and of Wales, § 179. 
Organic remains in the limestone, 
§ 180. 
Metalliferous relations, § 181. 
3. COAL FORMATION. 
Allusion to that of Munster, Castle- 
comer, and to the North of Freshford, 
§ 182 . 
Description of the Killenaule Coal 
district, physical and geological, § 183 
to § 195. 
Organic remains, § 196 to § 198. 
Surface and outskirts of the district, 
§ 199, 200. 
Characters of the limestone around 
the district, § 201. 
IV. Alluvial Tracts. 
General view of the subject, § 202. 
Particular views in relation to the 
Eastern Mountain Chain, § 203 to 
§ 209. 
Analogous to those of the ether 
Mountain Chains, § 210. 
View of the great Limestone Field, 
§ 211 . 
Bogs, § 212. 
Ancient forests, § 213. 
Organic remains, § 214* 
