332 Superficial Gravels and Clays . [July, 
Turnham Green. Near the Kew Bridge Station of the South 
Western Railway the line has been widened, and a long 
section is exposed, showing a brown unstratified clay, with 
Sand-pits near Kew Bridge Railway Station. 
c; Surface soil. a, I. Unstratified brown clay. a, 3. Gravel in brown clay. 
c 1. Reddish, rather coarse, sand, with oblique stratification overlying a thin seam 
of dark loamy clay. c, 2, Yellow sand overlying very sandy subangular gravel. 
patches of pebbles at itsbase, overlying sand and sandy gravel. 
From the latter I obtained a small portion of a deer’s horn. 
These beds were exposed in some sand-pits about 50 yards 
east of the station, as shown in Fig. 16. 
I watched these pits for months, but could never find a 
fragment of a shell in them. A pit was sunk through the 
Gravel-pit near Style Hall. 
s. Surface soil. a, I. Brown unstratified clay. a, 2. Scattered pebbles along an 
undulating line. a, 3. Sandy clay. c. Ferruginous gravel at top, with lenti- 
cular patches of sand passing downwards into sandy subangular gravel, with a few 
stones of quartzite at base 7 inches diameter. /. Sharp sand, with bones. 
L. London Clay. 
gravel to the London Clay below, for the foundation of a crane, 
and a seam of sand was met with at the base of the gravel 
from which several mammalian bones were obtained, now in 
the possession of Mr. T. Layton, of Kew Bridge. 
