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274 PROCEEDIN^GS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. .Feb. 7,
At Invernettie, near Peterhead (see Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol.
xiv. p. 518, 1858), the base of the section shows fine stratified clay
and sand free from stones, above which there is a thick mass of
rough pebbly clay like that of Caithness, containing well-scratched
boulders of granite, sandstone, &c., with some broken sea-shells,
which also show traces of glacial scratching. Here, then, we have
a mass of unstratified drift closely resembling that of Caithness,
and from its position above the fine laminated clay apparently later
than at least a part of the glacial-marine beds.
But the glacial deposits at King-Edward, in Aberdeenshire, throw
still more light upon the relations of the Caithness beds. Some
sections recently laid open there have enabled me to understand
their arrangement far better than formerly. At this locality there
are deep masses of unstratified pebbly mud of a dark-gTcy colour,
very hard and firm, containing stones (some of which are ice-worn
and striated) and fragments of shells, which are likewise occasionally
scratched. It is, in short, so like the Caithness Drift in every re-
spect — in colour, texture, and organic contents — that I can perceive
no difference between them. It has been called " the Boulder-day^
by Mr. Eobert Chambers, who visited the locality in 1855 *. Besides
this coarse stony mud there are some beds of fine stratified sand,
which often contain remains of shells in considerable abundance,
most of them broken, but many of them entire. The bivalves
always occur in detached pieces and want the epidermis, as if they
had been washed about by water. This, I believe, is the bed that
yielded Hugh Miller's specimens, and from which I have obtained
most of the species enumerated from King-Edward in my paper on
the last geological changes in Scotland. But there is another bed
of fine dark-grey silt, free from stones, containing Arctic shells en-
tire, and apparently in situ, with the epidermis on. The Tellina
calcaria occurs here of large size, with both valves connected by the
ligament and shut, also Leda, Natica, and others ; they are very
sparingly dispersed in the silt, which contains streaks of black car-
bonaceous matter, proceeding probably from the decay of seaweed.
It also contains Foraminifera. This bed of silt I noticed in 1857 ;
Eig. 6. — Section at King-Edward, Aberdeenshire.
1. Valley-gravel.
2. Pebbly clay.
3. Fine sand with shells.
4. Fine silt with shells in situ.
5. Rock.

  • See ' Proceedings of Royal Society of Edinburgh,' Dec. 17, 1865.
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Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/13935386282
Author Geological Society of London
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The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London.
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36164703
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111477 (Find related Wikimedia Commons images)
Title ID
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51125
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Page 274
Names
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NameFound:Foraminifera NameConfirmed:Foraminifera EOLID:2869058 NameBankID:5953016 NameFound:Natica NameConfirmed:Natica EOLID:58662 NameBankID:2684906 NameFound:Tellina calcaria
BHL Page URL
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https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/36164703
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Text
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  • The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London. v. 22 (1866).
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Flickr posted date
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21 April 2014
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This file comes from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.

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current06:38, 26 August 2015Thumbnail for version as of 06:38, 26 August 20151,207 × 2,055 (602 KB) (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{BHL | title = The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London. | source = http://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/13935386282 | description = 274 PROCEEDIN^GS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. .Feb. 7, <br> At Invernettie...

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