124 CONTRIBUTIONS TO DEVONIAN PALEONTOLOGY. [bull. 244. 
CA1STOE CAMP SECTION. 
By E. M. Kindle. 
The section at Canoe Camp begins at the lower cascade in Canoe 
Camp Creek, near Canoe Camp, Tioga County, Pa., and runs up the 
ravine and sidehill to the old ore pits on south side of Butts Hill. 
Section 1459 A, at Canoe Camp, Pa. 
Ft. in. 
18. Thin-bedded sandstone and shale, olive gray, with some reddish bands 
near base 12 '■ 
17. Fine-grained oolitic iron ore (thickness concealed ) 
16. Concealed 135 
15. Gray shale 20 
14. Concealed 4 
13. Grayshale 2 I 
12. Hard gray sandstone 8 
11. Concealed 2 
10. Gray soft shale with some bands of hard sandstone 5 6 
9. Blue calcareous sandstone full of fossils 8 
8. Grayshale - 6 
7. Thin-bedded sandstone and shale 6 
6. Thin-bedded sandstone and bluish-gray shale, with corals 10 
5. Bluish-gray sandstone full of fossils 0< ?I 
4. Drab-colored sandy shale 17 
3. Concealed (above fall in creek) 140 
2. Thin-bedded shaly drab sandstone and shale 5 
1. Grayish-drab sandstone and shale 11 
FAUNULES OF THE CANOE CAMP SECTION. 
The fanules of the Canoe Camp section are all Chemung. They are 
as follows: 
Zone 1 of Canoe Camp section (14-59 A). — The lowest zone of the 
section, which is exposed at the cascade in Canoe Camp Creek, con- 
tains the following faunule: 
Faunule of zone 1 of Canoe Camp section ( 1459 A ) . 
[a, abundant; c, common; r, rare.] 
5. Spirifer disjunctus (a). 
6. Leptodesma creon. 
7. Cypricardella cf. bellistriata (r). 
1. Strophonella cpelata (r). 
2. Orthothetes chemungensis (c). 
3. Productella lachrymosa (c). 
4. Schizophoria striatula (c). 
Zone # of Canoe Camp section (1^59 A). — Five feet of shaly sand- 
stone immediately following the preceding zone contains the following 
species : 
Faunule of zone 2 of Canoe Camp section (1459 A). 
[a, abundant; c, common; r, rare.] 
1. Stropheodonta (Douvillina) mucro- 
nata (c). 
2. Strophonella caelata (c). 
3. Orthothetes chemungensis (c). 
4. Productella cf. lachrymosa (r). 
5. Schizophoria striatula (a). 
6. Atrypa spinosa (r). 
7. Cyrtina hamiltonensis (r). 
8. Spirifer disjunctus (a). 
