File:The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London (13958742353).jpg

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478
PKOCEEDIXGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY.
.May 9,
There is no doubt that the whittling is as old as the bone ; for, be-
sides the fact of the cut surfaces having the same features as those
which are natural, and their very existence being unknown until the
fossil came into my hands, there is the satisfactory circumstance of
a few of them being covered with a stalagmitic deposit ; moreover
these facets are slightly concave, as if shrunk from the animal matter
having been subsequently removed.
It occurred twelve feet deep, in the freshwater stratum of Barn-
well, associated with remains of Elephant, Ehinoceros, and Hippo-
potamus.
There is another class of facts in connexion with this gravel
worth remark ; and that is, the " pipes " and what I shall name

  • ' walls." The pipes vary much in size and length ; the particles

of gravel generally dip towards them, though in one instance the
edges of these beds on each side were directed upward — which I can
account for by a gaping of the gravel, and material falling into the
hole while it was closing, or by the forcible uprooting of a tree.
The ivalls extend from the top to the bottom of the pits ; they are
more uniform in width than the pipes, and are usually hard, so that
when the gravel is dug away they stand out like walls. At Ches-
terton, one about eight inches thick had the gravel dug away on each
side for from twenty to thirty feet. Its sides were hard like mortar.
The direction was north and south. One at Barnwell, originally only
a foot wide, after a few feet had been cut away terminated in the fault
shown in fig. 2. ; and when a few feet more were cut down all trace
of disturbance was lost.
Fig. 2. — Section in the Barmuell Gravel-pit, showing a downward
slip of 6 inches.
a. Marl bed. b. Fine gravel. c. Marl bed. d. Fine gravel.
The width of the faulted piece at the upper marl band is 7 feet.
These seem to me to be the typical facts of the Cambridgeshire
gravels ; and it is only to be added that Prof. Hailstone and Mr.
Warburton, in an early volume of the Geological Society's Transac-
tions, described the coarse gravel capping the Gogmagog and Harston

hiUs. From the Gogs, Prof. Sedgwick and I have collected exam-
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Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/13958742353
Author Geological Society of London
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The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London.
Page ID
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36164927
Item ID
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111477 (Find related Wikimedia Commons images)
Title ID
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51125
Page numbers
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Page 478
BHL Page URL
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https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/36164927
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Text
Flickr sets
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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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26 August 2015

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current06:31, 26 August 2015Thumbnail for version as of 06:31, 26 August 20151,170 × 2,049 (638 KB) (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{BHL | title = The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London. | source = http://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/13958742353 | description = 478 <br> PKOCEEDIXGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. <br> .May 9, <br> There...

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