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IV.—The English Crags, and their Stratigraphical Divisions indicated by their Invertebrate Fauna1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

Certain opinions have been put forth during the last few years which do not seem to be quite in accordance with some facts which have come to our knowledge in working out systematically, various pits and sections in the Red Crag district, and we propose discussing in the following paper a few of the more salient points bearing upon the fauna, and the position in time and place of this particular series of deposits.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1871

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Footnotes

1

Read before the Geologists' Association April 4th, 1871.

References

page 261 note 1 In justice to ourselves we ought to say that our investigations in the horizontal Crag were begun long before our attention was called to Mr. Wood's map, or paper. Should the physical and palæontological evidence concur, as we believe it will, the question as to the superposition of the Upper Crag over the Lower will besettled, and it will then be necessary to show the agreement in the fauna of all the deposits which we have comprised under the heading Upper Crag. This must, however, be left till a future opportunity. A slight indication how matters stand in this direction is all that we now propose giving.