362 GEOLOGY OF OHIO. 
summit of the ridge, are from a half inch to four inches in thickness, of 
the usual drab color and fine grain. The quarry exposes six feet of hori- 
zontal bedding. 
The following outcrops of the Waterlime were noted in Madison town- 
ship: 
S. $ section 80. Worked for lime and for ‘stone, on land of Ulrich 
Thomas and of Jacob Bower. It also appears on land of John Wilson, 
half a mile south, on section 31. 
S. E. + section 24. On Abram Roderbauch’s farm. 
N. HE. $+ section 23. On Michael Simms’s land. 
Section 11. Slightly quarried in the creek, on the land of Nicholas 
Price. | 
N. KE. 4 section 11. At the highway bridge, and at other places near, 
where a little stone has been taken out for common foundations. 
In Jackson township, about the center of section 8, Mr. William Bishop 
burns quicklime from Waterlime beds of about two inches. The bedding 
here, as at Mr. Gobrecht’s quarry, shows some disturbance, which has 
displaced the layers. 
In Findlay township the Waterlime was seen at the following expo- 
sures: 
S. W. a. section 380. Here are the adjoining quarries of 8. R. McCahan 
and George Woodley. They are located near the southern end of a ridge 
of Waterlime which is nearly three miles in length, running north and 
south, and reaching into section 14 The following descending section 
was taken at this place, dip west and south-west : 
No. 1. Thin-bedded, drab; used only for macadamizing roads... 5 ft. 
“9. Drab flags, in even beds two inches thick.............00.00000 08 4 in. 
‘* 3. Coarse-grained ; porous, and in some places carious; rough ; 
darkidrabvors brow Meer ans OU Ae RATE ELS AAD ay Hes eter cll Mey cs tiba 
‘“ 4, Hard, thin, irregular or lenticular beds, sometimes appear- 
ing massive, with ‘cavities; EXPOSE :..... 02.6.0 .ccceese oes cee vee Ziti 
Mo tals exposes wl Ghat Vl TAO Ge NES NL HERVE Ee Cel alae 
No. 3 of this section has every appearance of being the equivalent of 
No. 1 of the section at Anderson’s quarry, on section 22, Pitt township, 
Wyandot county, and of No. 10 of the section near Cary’s quarry, sec- 
tions 27 and 34, Crawford, in the same county. 
Near Findlay, on section 24, Mr. Elijah Barnes has opened a quarry 
in the same ridge, and exposed about six feet of beds undistinguish- 
able from those of No. 1 of the foregoing section. The beds are here 
shattered, and part in quarrying into angular pieces of a few inches 
across; dip, ten degrees west south-west. About twenty degrees south-west 
