A PRELIMINARY REPORT ON CLA^S OE ELORIDA 
225 
Fig. 42.—Plant of Florida China Clay Co., near Okahumpka, Lake County. 
Fig. 43. —Removal of overburden by hydraulicking. Florida China 
Clay Company, Lake County. 
low and more or less connected and largely land-locked, as is now 
illustrated by the numerous bays and sounds indenting the Florida coast¬ 
line, then it is easy to conceive of a more or less continuous deposit of 
this sedimentary kaolin being formed around the border of the penin¬ 
sula as it existed at that time. This formation has since been largely re- 
