134 
TABULAR VIEW OF 
CRETACE¬ 
OUS, 
OOLITE. 
LIAS. 
TRIAS. 
10 . 
UPPER 
CRETACE¬ 
OUS. 
11 . 
LOWER 
CRETACE¬ 
OUS 
or 
NEOCO- 
MIAN. 
12 . 
UPPER 
OOLITE. 
13. 
MIDDLE 
OOLITE. 
14. 
LOWER 
OOLITE. 
15. 
LIAS. 
16. 
UPPER 
TRIAS. 
17. 
MIDDLE 
TRIAS. 
18. 
LOWER 
TRIAS. 
EXAMPLES. 
' Maestricht beds and Faxoe chalk (p. 283). 
Pisolitic limestone of France (p. 285). 
White chalk of France, Sweden, and Russia (pp. 
286, 287). 
Pliiner-kalk of Saxony (p. 293). 
Sands and clays of Aix-la-Chapelle (p. 302). 
Hippurite limestone of South of France (p. 305). 
New Jersey, U. S., sands and marls (p. 307). 
British—SRTids of Folkstone, Sandgate, and Hythe 
' (p. 308). 
Atherfield clay, with Perna mulleti (p. 309). 
Punlleld marine beds, with Vicarya lujana (p. 318). 
Speeton clay of Flamborough Head and Tealby (p. 
311). 
Weald clay of Surrey, Kent, and Sussex, fresh-wa¬ 
ter, with Cypris (p. 313-315). 
Hastings sands (p. 316-318). 
Foreign — Neocomian of Neufchatel, and Hils con¬ 
glomerate of North Germany (p. 312). 
Wealden beds of Hanover (p. 319). 
British —Upper Purbeck beds, fresh-water (p. 323). 
Middle Purbeck, with numerous marsupial quad¬ 
rupeds, etc. (p. 324). 
Lower Purbeck, fresh-water, with intercalated dirt- 
bed (p. 330). 
Portland stone and sand (p. 334). 
Kimmeridge clay (p. 335). 
Fom.f/n—Marnes a gryphees virgules of Argonne (p. 
336). 
Lithographic-stone of Solenhofen, with Archceop- 
teryx (p. 337). 
British —Coral rag of Berkshire, Wilts, and Yorkshire 
(p. 339). 
Oxford clay, with belemnites and ammonite (p. 
340). 
Kelloway rock of Wilts and Yorkshire (p. 341). 
Foreign —Nerinaean limestone of the Jura (p. 339). 
Cornbrash and forest marble (p. 341). 
Great or Bath oolite of Bradford (p. 342). 
Stonesficld slate, with marsupials and Araucaria 
(p. 345). 
Fuller’s earth of Bath (p. 348). 
Inferior oolite (p. 349). 
Upper lias, argillaceous, with Ammonites striafu^ 
lus (p. 353). 
Shale and limestone, with Ammo7iites hifrons (p. 
353). 
Middle lias or Marlstone series, with zones contain¬ 
ing characteristic ammonites (p. 353). 
Lower lias, also wdth zones characterized by pe¬ 
culiar ammonites (p. 356). 
British —^Rhoetic, Penarth or Avicula contorta beds 
(beds of passage) (p. 366). 
Keuper or Upper New Red sandstone, etc. (p. 369). 
Red shales of Cheshire and Lancashire, with rock- 
salt (p. 371). 
Dolomite conglomerate of Bristol (p. 373). 
Fo7'eig7i—KevLgei' beds of Germany (p. 375). 
St. Lassian or Hallstadt beds, with rich marine 
fauna (p. 376). 
Coal-field of Richmond, Virginia (p. 382). 
Chatham coal-field, North Carolina (p. 383). 
British —W anting. 
Muschelkalk of Germany (p. 378). 
British —Bunter or Lower New Red sandstone of 
Lancashire and Cheshire (p. 372). 
Bunter-sandstein of Germany (p. 380). 
Red sandstone of Connecticut Valley, with foot¬ 
prints of birds and reptiles (p. 381). 
