THE ESSEX FIELD CLUB. 
123 
After tea at the head-quarters, a meeting (the 412th) was held, Mr. 
W. Whitaker, President, in the chair. 
N ew Members. —The following were elected :—Mr. William Howard, 
The Willows, Prince’s Road, Biichhurst Hill; Mr. W. Richter Roberts, 
Monkwood Cottage, Baldwyn’s Hill, Loughton; Miss Elvina M. Heath, 
84, Claremont Road , Forest Gate. 
The Conductors, Miss Lorrain Smith, Miss G. Lister and Mr. Massee, 
gave short addresses on the observations of the day. Miss Lister’s re¬ 
searches are printed in her report in connection with the two Fungus 
meetings printed elsewhere (see pp. 126-8). 
Representatives of the Selborne Society and the School Nature-Study 
Union expressed the pleasure of their members at the cordial invitations 
extended to them by the Club. 
The Meeting then resolved itself into a conversazione for the examina¬ 
tion of the specimens obtained during the day. 
THE 413th MEETING. 
Saturday, 26th October 1912. 
This meeting was held as usual at Stratford at 6 o’clock, Mr. W. Whi¬ 
taker, F.R.S., in the chair. 
N ew Member. —The Rev. C. Grinling, 10, Rectory Place, Woolwich, 
Kent, was elected. 
Paper Read.— A paper entitled " Some Recent Observations on the 
Physiography of the Stort Valley, with special reference to the Rubble- 
Drift Deposits ” was read by the Rev. A. Irving, D.Sc., and Percy A. 
Irving, B.A. 
The paper dealt with a few of the more conspicuous examples of the 
Rubble-Drift movements that have taken place by the simple operation 
of gravitation acting upon materials placed in an unstable condition 
on the slopes and bluffs of the valley flank. They supplement the inland 
series of such deposits recorded in Prestwich’s map, attached to the most 
important of his two papers (ii). The opening up of the Stort Valley 
in public works and otherwise in recent years has afforded opportunities 
for observing the structure of such deposits. Special notes are added 
(1) on the Harlow Boulder-Clay and its differentiation from the Upper 
Stort Valley Drifts ; (2) on the north end of the section of plateau-gravel 
{prequaternary) at Braintree (Prestwich, Q.J.G.S., vol. xlvi. page 133, 
fig. 9), a case of special interest to Essex Geologists and Archaeologists ; 
{3) on the Bronze “ Hoard " found at Matching (Essex) in 1893, now in 
the Colchester Museum ; (4) Comparative study of Horse-molars (pre¬ 
historic) from Essex and Herts ; (5) Note on the Henham Horse-bones 
{Nature, May 2nd, 1912). 
The two papers of Prestwich’s alluded to above are (i) “On the Age, 
Formation, and Drift Stages of the Darent Valley ’’ ( Q.J.G.S. xlvii) ; (ii) 
“ On the Raised Beaches and ‘ Head ’ or Rubble-Drift of the South of 
England ; their Relation to the Valley Drifts and to the Glacial Period ’’ 
{Ibid, xlviii.). 
