DARTON.] 
NEW JERSEY. 
107 
Locality. 
Depth. 
Depth to Atlantic 
City horizons. 
Remarks. 
Brigantine 
Fifields 
Longport 
Ocean City 
Do 
Sea Isle City 
Wildwood 
Cape May Point 
Cape May City.. 
West Creek 
Port !Norris 
Bivalve 
Strait Creek 
Feet. 
798 
397 
800 
760 
800 
380 
1,244 
456+ 
224 
99 
78 
200 
100 
Feet. 
517 670 798 
803 
512,528 720 .... 
580 887 
200? .... 
100? .... 
100-gallon now. 
Unsatisfactory supply. 
25-gallon flow. 
140-gallon flow. 
30 gallons per minute. 
300 gallons at 580 to 655 feet. 
Water at 360 feet. 
Salt water. 
Good supply. 
Flowing well. 
The G85-foot horizon in the Ocean City well is not represented in the 
wells at Atlantic City. Mr. Woolman suggests that it supplies the water 
in one of the deepest Weymouth wells and in the Pleasant Mills well, 
and, as this seems reasonable, I have so shown it on section 3, PI. III. 
The two upper horizons at Atlantic City are not known to be extensive 
in area. It has been suggested by Mr. Woolman that the well at 
Bivalve is in the 406-foot Atlantic City horizon at a depth of 200 feet, 
on the evidence of the occurrence of diatoms, and that the well to 78 
feet at Port N orris, near by, is in the 328-foot horizon, but the evidence 
is not conclusive. The waters at 114 feet and 151 feet in the well at Port 
Eepublic are also thought by Mr. Woolman to be possibly from the 
328-foot and the 406-foot horizons at Atlantic City. The water horizon 
at Cape May at 320 to 360 feet and at Sea Isle City can not be defi- 
nitely correlated from data now on hand, but there is a fair degree of 
possibility that it is the 334-foot Ocean City horizon. In regard to the 
area! extensions of horizons deeper than the "E," or 700-foot Atlantic 
City water, we have relatively little reliable information. The "G-," or 
800-foot water, was also found in large supply at Ocean City, Longport, 
and Brigantine, and the well at Wildwood found a good water supply at 
931 feet, undoubtedly from this horizon. The well to 470 feet at 
Berkeley Arms may possibly be in this horizon, but as it is far below 
the great diatom bed, there is greater probability that it is deeper than 
the 960-foot Atlantic City horizon. The water at 175 feet at Mantolok- 
ing is clearly higher than the Berkeley Arms water, and as it is just 
below the great diatom bed, it is probably equivalent to the 700-foot 
horizon of Atlantic City, found at 320 feet at Great Sedge Island, near 
Barnegat Inlet. The Harrisia well found water in fair amount at 190 
feet, in all probability at the "E,"or 700-foot horizon, as suggested by 
Mr. Woolman, but when it was depeened did not go to a sufficient depth 
to reach the deeper waters which no doubt underlie the region and are 
reached by the deepest well at Winslow. 
