206 
FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY—THIRD ANNUAL REPORT. 
Feet. 
1. Light gray incoherent surface sands. r 
2. Coarse yellowish or buff obscurely stratified sand.. 6 
3. Black clay, horizontally laminated, containing leaves, twigs, 
prostrate logs, etc.^.. 1 
4. Sand blackened by vegetable matter, containing stumps in place 
and extending up through No. 3. 2 
5. Coarse indurated gray sand with quartz pebbles... 2+ 
The yellowish sand (No. 2) seems to be identical with much 
of the material exposed in the splendid bluffs on the west side 
Fig. 30.—Fossil peat locality about a half mile north of 
Milton, Santa Rosa County. The umbrella is sticking in one 
of the stumps, and a root of another can be seen project¬ 
ing from the bank near the center of the picture. June 
22, 1909. 
