342 
Ft. in. 
Coal ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 0 11 
Band ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 0 4 
Coal ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1 4 
Bands of clay and worthless coal 1 1 
Coal 1 7i 
Band 0 0^ 
Coal 0 7 
Band 0 2 
Coal ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 3 6 
Tho dip is 13° to S. 74° W. The lower seam (about six feet) is first worked, 
after which the “tops” are taken down. In the new tunnel the dip is 12° to west and 
south of shaft 20°.* 
Mount Pleasant . — This is a seam worked by Messrs. Stafford and by the Bore- 
hole Company in adjoining land. It is probably one of the seams being worked (by 
Messrs. Green and Jones), or cropping out in Mr. Allen’s property adjoining. The 
dip is 1 in 3 W. 10° S. 
Ft. in. 
Coal ... 
0 8 
Intermittent band of ironstone boulders 
0 8 
Coal ... 
10 
Band 
0 1 
Coal ... 
2 9 
Seams in Allen's PacldooTc, Ooodna. — In this property several seams of coal are 
worked by Messrs. Green and Jones, of which the following is an approximate 
section : — 
Ft. 
in. 
Seam (h) 
4 
0 
Strata 
60 
0 
Seam (g) with two small bands 
3 
0 
Strata 
22 
0 
Seam (f), coarse, only two feet being workable 
8 
0 
Strata 
12 
0 
Seam (e) 
2 
6 
Strata 
60 
0 
Seam (d) 
0 
0 
Strata 
60 
0 
Seam (c) 
0 
0 
Strata 
150 
0 
Seam (b) 
0 
0 
Strata 
80 
0 
Seams (c) and (<?) crop out in the paddock with a dip of 30° to 33° W. 
Scarborough' s Seam is four feet in thickness, with three small variable bands, 
irregular in thickness and position. It is worked at the Day Dawn Mine, Parish of 
Goodna. 
Stafford's Seam (which, however, is not the same worked by Messrs. Stafford) 
adjoins Scarborough’s Seam. Its thickness varies from two feet Tix inches to four 
feet. It has many small dislocations, and usually two thin bands. 
The Ebbio Vale Seam, near Dinmore, has a thickness of three feet four 
inches, with a band of ironstone boulders in the middle. It dips at 10° to 15° 
E. 10° N. 
* I cannot be certain whether this is the same seam as that referred to by Mr. Gregory in the 
heading of “Thomas’s New Coal Mine,” which iscalled the Aberdareby the Rev. Mr. Tenison Woods. (B.LA-I 
