Excursion to Bristol District, Easter, 1919. Wednesday, April 16th, to Wednesday, April 23rd - Geologists' Association excursion: Difference between revisions

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== Link to Album and Photograph index ==
'''To view photograph album:'''
[https://pubs.bgs.ac.uk/publications.html?pubID=GA009 Geologists' Association Carreck Archive. The Reader Geological Photographs Long Excursions 1919.]
'''To view detailed index of photographs taken on this excursion:'''
[[T W Reader geological photographs, long excursions 1919 - index, GA 'Carreck Archive'#Bristol Excursion, April, 1919|T W Reader geological photographs, long excursions 1919 - index, GA 'Carreck Archive']]
== Geologists' Association Circular No. 216. Session 1919–1920. p. 3–8 ==
== Geologists' Association Circular No. 216. Session 1919–1920. p. 3–8 ==
<gallery>
<gallery>
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A general account of the Geology of the Bristol district will be found in chapters 14 and 15 of "Geology in the Field," the Jubilee volume of the Geologists' Association. A briefer account entitled 'A Sketch of the Geological History of the Bristol district' was published in the Proceedings of. the Bristol Naturalists' Society in 1909, and a similar account, with details concerning the excursions will be found in "A Geological Excursion Handbook for the Bristol district" (published Arrowsmith, Quay Street, Bristol, 3/6), which members are recommended to get.
A general account of the Geology of the Bristol district will be found in chapters 14 and 15 of "Geology in the Field," the Jubilee volume of the Geologists' Association. A briefer account entitled 'A Sketch of the Geological History of the Bristol district' was published in the Proceedings of. the Bristol Naturalists' Society in 1909, and a similar account, with details concerning the excursions will be found in "A Geological Excursion Handbook for the Bristol district" (published Arrowsmith, Quay Street, Bristol, 3/6), which members are recommended to get.


== Thursday, April 17th. The Silurian and associated igneous rocks of the Tortworth Inlier.==  
== Thursday, April 17th. The Silurian and associated igneous rocks of the Tortworth Inlier ==  
'''Director,''' Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS.
'''Director,''' Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS.


Line 54: Line 65:
Leave hotel at 9.30 and take tram at the Centre as far as Dowry Square. Cross the Swing Bridge at the entrance to the Floating Harbour, and the New Cut by the Clifton Bridge Ferry.
Leave hotel at 9.30 and take tram at the Centre as far as Dowry Square. Cross the Swing Bridge at the entrance to the Floating Harbour, and the New Cut by the Clifton Bridge Ferry.


Follow the section in descending order. The higher beds ''—Dibunophyllum ''and Upper ''Seminula ''Beds—are seen in duplicate being repeated by the Observatory Hill fault, but the exposures in the series as repeated are not good on the left bank. The following are the horizons to which special attention will be paid :—# <div style="margin-left:1.27cm;margin-right:0cm;">D<sub>1</sub> very fossiliferous seen in the riverside exposures.
Follow the section in descending order. The higher beds ''—Dibunophyllum ''and Upper ''Seminula ''Beds—are seen in duplicate being repeated by the Observatory Hill fault, but the exposures in the series as repeated are not good on the left bank. The following are the horizons to which special attention will be paid :—
 
# D<sub>1</sub> very fossiliferous seen in the riverside exposures.
# S<sub>2</sub> poorly exposed in quarry 5, well seen in the riverside exposures. The well-known Concretionary beds' have recently proved to be largely of algal origin.
# S<sub>2</sub> poorly exposed in quarry 5, well seen in the riverside exposures. The well-known Concretionary beds' have recently proved to be largely of algal origin.
# S<sub>1</sub> exposed, but not too well, in quarry 4.
# S<sub>1</sub> exposed, but not too well, in quarry 4.
Line 64: Line 77:




'''REFERENCES'''.—3, 11, 19, 21, 24, 25, 34, 35, p. 41.:
'''REFERENCES'''.—3, 11, 19, 21, 24, 25, 34, 35, p. 41.


== Saturday, April 19th. Burrington and Cheddar ==
== Saturday, April 19th. Burrington and Cheddar ==
Line 80: Line 93:
Tea will be provided at the Cliff Hotel (1/3 each) and the return to Bristol made by the 5.4 train, arriving Bristol 6.23. Fare, 2/9. Walking distance about 5 miles.
Tea will be provided at the Cliff Hotel (1/3 each) and the return to Bristol made by the 5.4 train, arriving Bristol 6.23. Fare, 2/9. Walking distance about 5 miles.


'''REFERENCES'''.—17, 20, 23, 25, 30, 33, 35, pp. 106 and 113.:
'''REFERENCES'''.—17, 20, 23, 25, 30, 33, 35, pp. 106 and 113.


== Monday, April 21st. Lower Lias and Coal Measures of the Radstock district ==
== Monday, April 21st. Lower Lias and Coal Measures of the Radstock district ==
Line 112: Line 125:
Brakes will meet the party at the station for a drive to Aust which should be. reached at about 4.0.
Brakes will meet the party at the station for a drive to Aust which should be. reached at about 4.0.


After tea visit the fine section of Keuper and Rhaetic rocks. The section forms '''a '''gentle anticline the upper beds being accessible only at the southern. end. Several faults traverse the strata and each brings in apatch of Lower Lias which owing to its resistent character is responsible for the little promontory which accompanies each fault. All the horizons can be readily examined in fallen blocks. The Bone Bed for which the Aust section is so famous is a discontinuous band. The lower part of the Keuper series in the core of the anticline is noteworthy for the abundant gypsum and for a layer containing pseudomorphs after rock salt. Drive back to Bristol arriving about 8.0. Cost of drive,
After tea visit the fine section of Keuper and Rhaetic rocks. The section forms a gentle anticline the upper beds being accessible only at the southern. end. Several faults traverse the strata and each brings in apatch of Lower Lias which owing to its resistent character is responsible for the little promontory which accompanies each fault. All the horizons can be readily examined in fallen blocks. The Bone Bed for which the Aust section is so famous is a discontinuous band. The lower part of the Keuper series in the core of the anticline is noteworthy for the abundant gypsum and for a layer containing pseudomorphs after rock salt. Drive back to Bristol arriving about 8.0. Cost of drive.


'''REFERENCES'''.—4, 16, 28, 35, p. 183.
'''REFERENCES'''.—4, 16, 28, 35, p. 183.

Latest revision as of 21:22, 18 October 2020

Link to Album and Photograph index

To view photograph album:

Geologists' Association Carreck Archive. The Reader Geological Photographs Long Excursions 1919.

To view detailed index of photographs taken on this excursion:

T W Reader geological photographs, long excursions 1919 - index, GA 'Carreck Archive'

Geologists' Association Circular No. 216. Session 1919–1920. p. 3–8

Excursion to Bristol District, Easter, 1919. Wednesday, April 16th, to Wednesday, April 23rd (Transcription from: GA Circular No. 216. Session 1919–1920. p. 3–8)

Directors, Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS, Sc.D., F.G.S. and J. W. TUTCHER.

Excursion Secretary, B. A. BAKER, F.G.S., 38, Queen's Square, Bristol.

Wednesday, April 16th.

Leave Paddington, 4.0 p.m. Arrive Bristol, 6.30 p.m. Fare, 14/8 Single.

HOTEL ARRANGEMENTS.—The following is a list of Hotels available. Members should book their rooms as soon as possible, saying they are members of the Association :

Grand Hotel, Broad Street-13/6 per day. Headquarters.

Lyndale Hotel, Berkeley Square, Clifton-11/6 per day.

Talbot Hotel, (Commercial), Victoria Street-10/- per day.

Central Hotel, Park Street-8/6 per day.

Members intending to take part in this Excursion should at once communicate with Mr. BAKER, enclosing a stamped addressed envelope or postcard for reply. Members should take lunch with there each day.

Prof. REYNOLDS will, if desired, give a Lantern Lecture on the Geology of the Bristol district on Thursday evening, at the University. An exhibition of specimens will be arranged in the geological department of the University, to which members of the party will have access. Special attention is directed to the splendid geologically coloured model of the Bristol district in the City museum.

A general account of the Geology of the Bristol district will be found in chapters 14 and 15 of "Geology in the Field," the Jubilee volume of the Geologists' Association. A briefer account entitled 'A Sketch of the Geological History of the Bristol district' was published in the Proceedings of. the Bristol Naturalists' Society in 1909, and a similar account, with details concerning the excursions will be found in "A Geological Excursion Handbook for the Bristol district" (published Arrowsmith, Quay Street, Bristol, 3/6), which members are recommended to get.

Thursday, April 17th. The Silurian and associated igneous rocks of the Tortworth Inlier

Director, Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS.

Leave Bristol (M.R.), for Charfield by the 10.30 train arriving 11.29. Fare, 2/1½. (Single ticket).

The railway traverses the northern part of the Bristol coalfield, a synclinal fold enclosed by a rim of Carboniferous Limestone, which is penetrated by the tunnel S. of Wickwar.

On arriving at Charfield, drive to the old quarry (Cullimore's) north of the station. Here the upper of the two bands of "trap" (a somewhat ill-defined amygdaloidal rock probably to be classed with the spilites) is exposed, and resting on it is a band of fossiliferous calcareous tuff of late Llandovery or early Wenlock age.

The Silurian rocks are now hidden for a space by the Trias, but reappear at Avening Green, the next spot to be visited. Here the upper band of trap is interesting as containing quartz xenocrysts, and an exposure of Llandovery has been opened by the kindness of Lord Ducie. Walk then along the Little Avon to Damery. Here are a small quarry in fossiliferous Llandovery, and a large one in "trap." Drive on to Middlemill, where a small exposure of fossiliferous limestone with large lapilli rests on the trap. Rejoining the brakes, drive southward along the western part of the inlier to the Wenlock quarry at Whitfield where many well-preserved fossils have been found. Return to Charfield through Tortworth Park, by the kindness of Lord Ducie, and after tea at the Railway Tavern take the 6.34 train to Bristol (due 7.28). Cost of drive,

REFERENCES.—12, 22, 26, 27, 35, p. 200.

Friday, April 18th. Carboniferous Limestone of the left bank of the Avon

Director, Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS.

Leave hotel at 9.30 and take tram at the Centre as far as Dowry Square. Cross the Swing Bridge at the entrance to the Floating Harbour, and the New Cut by the Clifton Bridge Ferry.

Follow the section in descending order. The higher beds —Dibunophyllum and Upper Seminula Beds—are seen in duplicate being repeated by the Observatory Hill fault, but the exposures in the series as repeated are not good on the left bank. The following are the horizons to which special attention will be paid :—

  1. D1 very fossiliferous seen in the riverside exposures.
  2. S2 poorly exposed in quarry 5, well seen in the riverside exposures. The well-known Concretionary beds' have recently proved to be largely of algal origin.
  3. S1 exposed, but not too well, in quarry 4.
  4. C. The upper C beds (laminosa-dolomites) are well exposed in quarry 3, but are not easily accessible. The massive beds of the Caninia-oolite are finely seen in quarry 3.
  5. Z2 is well exposed in quarry 2, and
  6. Z1 in quarry 1 ; both are very fossiliferous.
  7. Very little is seen of K2, but K1 and Km the passage beds to the Old Red Sandstone are well seen and fossiliferous in the riverside exposure at the end of the section.
  8. The upper beds of the Old Red Sandstone.


REFERENCES.—3, 11, 19, 21, 24, 25, 34, 35, p. 41.

Saturday, April 19th. Burrington and Cheddar

Director, Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS.

Leave Bristol (G.W.R.) by the 9.30 train, arriving Burrington, 10.41.

Fare, 2/5½ (Single).

In this excursion the Black Down pericline, the most westerly of the four forming the Mendip Hills will be crossed, and the two splendid gorges of Burrington and Cheddar traversed. The interest of this excursion is partly stratigraphical, affording an opportunity of comparing the Mendip development of Carboniferous Limestone with the Avon section, partly physiographical, illustrating the gorges, caves and swallets characteristic of a district formed of massive limestone.

The Burrington section will be examined in descending order. The upper beds (Dibunophyllum and Seminula beds) are not very well seen, and do not differ materially from those of the Avon. The Syringothyris (C) beds are finely exposed and consist mainly of massive limestone, the dolomites which are so extensively developed in the Avon section on this horizon being comparatively thin. The lower part of the Syringothyris beds (C1γ) and the whole of the Zaphrentis-zone are highly fossiliferous. As far as the upper part of the Zaphrentis zone the Combe follows the line of dip fairly closely, but it now bends sharply to the east and runs approximately along the line of strike, being bordered on the north by a fine escarpment. Near here two small valleys lead into the Combe, both of them being occupied by streams which disappear into swallets before reaching the main valley. Each stream gives a section from Z1 to the O.R.S. Enter the mouth of the western valley, where there is good collecting ground for Z1 fossils, then cross to the eastern stream, passing the mouth of the Goatchurch cave en route. In the eastern stream the lowest Cleistopora (K) beds are well seen. Continue to ascend the stream, cross the O.R.S. moor of the top of Blackdown and walk to the top of the Cheddar gorge. The Cheddar gorge to a great extent follows the strike of the rocks, and the section is by 'no means so extensive as at Burrington, being mainly in the Seminula-zone. Tt is hardly likely that much time will be available for examining the rocks, and the magnificence of the gorge can best be appreciated if the path along the top of the cliffs is followed. Near the mouth of the gorge are the famous Cheddar caves, and the Cheddar stream may be noted issuing from an opening at the base of the cliff.

Tea will be provided at the Cliff Hotel (1/3 each) and the return to Bristol made by the 5.4 train, arriving Bristol 6.23. Fare, 2/9. Walking distance about 5 miles.

REFERENCES.—17, 20, 23, 25, 30, 33, 35, pp. 106 and 113.

Monday, April 21st. Lower Lias and Coal Measures of the Radstock district

Director, J. W. TUTCHER.

Leave Bristol (G.W.R.) at 10.10, arriving Midsomer Norton and Welton at 10.56. Fare, 1/10 (Single).

Visit first the Bowldish quarries in the Lower Lias, which lie about ¾ -mile N. of the station. Here the Sauzeanum-zone is very fossiliferous, and from it the finest specimens of Spiriferina Walcotti have been obtained. The raricostatus and armatus zones are also present. Walk on to the Clan Down quarries, about a mile further east. These show good exposures of the armatus and Jamesoni-zones, and at the Colliery near by Coal Measure plants may usually be found in abundance. Descend the hill to Radstock, and passing through it, visit two quarries ¾-mile south of the town. These exhibit all the Sinemurian and Hettangian deposits represented in the Radstoek area, together with some lower Charmouthian. The raricostatus beds are especially rich in fossils at these quarries.

After tea (1/3) at the Bell, return from Radstock (G.W.R.) by the 5.14 train, reaching Bristol at 6.17. Walking distance about 4½. miles.

REFERENCES.—1, 2, 8 and 35, pp. 152 and 160.

Tuesday, April 22nd.

Director—Prof, S. H. REYNOLDS.

Morning—Portishead.

Leave Bristol by the 9.50 train arriving Portishead 10.27. Return fare, 2/10½.

The most interesting rocks to be examined on this excursion are the Old Red Sandstone and Dolomitic Conglomerate (base of Trias). Many instructive examples of structural geology will be seen. Walk to Portishead Dock station noting Dolomitic Conglomerate unconformable on the O.R.S., and near by on the Carboniferous Limestone, which is faulted against Pennant Grit. Walk to Battery Point where the lower Zaphrentis and upper Cleistopora beds are seen, the latter being folded into a remarkable series of little anticlines and synclines. At the southern end of Woodhill Bay a fine section of the O.R.S. begins, several Ethological types are met with, shale, mudstone, conglomerate and cornstone, while ripple marking and other evidence for accumulation in shallow water is well displayed. Several faults traverse the rocks and the Dolomitic Conglomerate is seen resting with strong unconformity on the O.R.S.

REFERENCES.—6 and 35, p. 74.

Afternoon—Aust.

Return to Bristol by the 1.10 train arriving 1.49.

Brakes will meet the party at the station for a drive to Aust which should be. reached at about 4.0.

After tea visit the fine section of Keuper and Rhaetic rocks. The section forms a gentle anticline the upper beds being accessible only at the southern. end. Several faults traverse the strata and each brings in apatch of Lower Lias which owing to its resistent character is responsible for the little promontory which accompanies each fault. All the horizons can be readily examined in fallen blocks. The Bone Bed for which the Aust section is so famous is a discontinuous band. The lower part of the Keuper series in the core of the anticline is noteworthy for the abundant gypsum and for a layer containing pseudomorphs after rock salt. Drive back to Bristol arriving about 8.0. Cost of drive.

REFERENCES.—4, 16, 28, 35, p. 183.

Wednesday, April 23rd. Carboniferous Volcanice Rocks of the Weston-super-Mare district

Director: Prof. S. H. REYNOLDS.

Leave Bristol by the 9.36 train, arriving Weston 10.30. Return fare, 4/9.

Drive to Spring Cove, where a bed of basaltic lava about 35 feet thick is interbedded in the Syrinyothyris-beds (top of C1). It has been described in detail by Prof. W. S. BOULTON, who pointed out that the basalt mass is by no means a simple lava flow. It may be divided into three portions. Beginning at the cliff end, the rock for the first 30 yards is a pillowy lava., then for a middle region of about 20 yards it is a coarse agglomerate with large lumps of limestone. and appears to be of the nature of a fluxion tuff. Finally, for the remaining 100 yards or so, it is an ordinary basalt flow with smaller lumps ofburnt limestone. in all cases the limestone appears to have been picked up by the lava, not introduced subsequently from above.

After driving through Kew Stoke Wood, leave brakes and walk across Sand Bay to the Woodspring promontory, which consists of a southward-dipping mass of Carboniferous Limestone, ranging from Z2 to C1 and including an igneous development in horizon γ (that of overlap between Z and C), i.e. at a lower level than at Spring Cove. There are four sections of the igneous series, the westernmost section, where the series is about 100 feet thick, and includes a bed of lava as well as tuff, being the finest. The second and third sections, which lie close together at a distance of rather more than a mile from the first, show only tuff, the lava flow not occurring. The Carboniferous Limestone rocks associated with the igneous series are highly fossiliferous.

After visiting the third section, walk to Woodspring Priory where tea will be provided. Drive back to Weston via Worle, visiting en route a quarry at the western end of Worle Hill where the Seminula-beds are overfolded owing to a reversed fault, which, running the whole length of Worle Hill brings the Syringothyris-beds on the south over the Seminula-beds on the north. Return to Bristol by the 6.53 train arriving Bristol 7.20. Cost of drive, Motor for 20 persons, £4. The same train leaves for London at 7.30, arriving 10.30. Members therefore returning to London the same night should take their luggage to Weston in the morning and leave it in the Cloak Room.

REFERENCES.—10, 13, 14, 15, 22., 25, 35, pp. 87, 94, and 36.

Maps

GEOLOGICAL.—The index map scale 4m. to 1 in., sheet 11, covers the whole district.

The sheets of the old 1 in. Survey required are : For use on April 19th and 21st, sheet 19 ; for use on April 17th, 18th and 22nd, sheet 35 ; for use on April 23rd, the revised map, colour printed, sheet 263.

Bartholomew's ½ in. to mile contoured map, sheet 28, Bath and Bristol district, is very useful (price 2s.).:

References

1.—1875. R. TATE.—"The Lias about Radstock," Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxxi, p. 493.

2.—1875. E. B. TAWNEY.—"Notes on the Lias in the neighbourhood of Radstock," Brist. Nat. Soc. Proc., N.S., vol. i, p. 167.

3.—1876. H. B. WOODWARD.—"Geology of the East Somerset and Bristol Coalfields."

4.—1880. W. J. SOLLAS.—"On the Geology of the Bristol District," Proc. Geol. Assoc., vol. vi, p. 375.

5.—1884. C. LLOYD MORGAN.—"Subaerial Denudation and the Avon Gorge," Brist. Nat. Soc. Proc., New (3rd) Series, vol. iv, p. 171.

6.—1885. C. LLOYD MORGAN.—"On the Geology of Portishead," ibid, vol. v, p. 6.

7.—1887. C. LLOYD MORGAN.—"The Mendips ; a Geological Reverie," Brist. Nat.. Soc. Proc., New (3rd) Series, vol. v, p. 236.

8.—1893. H. B. WOODWARD.—"The Jurassic Rocks of Britain," vol. iii, ; "The Lias of England and Wales,"Mem. Geol. Surv.

9.—1898. C. LLOYD MORGAN.—"Geological History of the Neighbourhood of Bristol," British Association Handbook.

10.—1899. A. GEIKIE AND A. STRAHAN.—"Volcanic Group in the Carboniferous Limestone of North Somerset," Summary of Progress of Geol. Survey for 1898, p. 104.

11.—1901. C. LLOYD MORGAN.—"Report on an Excursion to the Avon Gorge," Proc. Geol. Assoc., vol. xvii, p. 159 (part 4. 1s.).

12.—1901. C. LLOYD MORGAN AND S. H. REYNOLDS.—"The Igneous Rocks and associated Sedimentary beds of the Tortworth Inlier," Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lxvii, p. 267.

13.—1904. W. S. BOULTON.—"On the Igneous Rocks at Spring Cove, near Weston-super-Mare," Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lx, p. 158.

14.—1904. C. LLOYD MORGAN AND S. H. REYNOLDS.—"The Igneous.Rocks associated with the Carboniferous Limestone of the Bristol District," Quart. Jowl?. Geol. Soc., vol. lx, p. 137.

15.—1904. C. LLOYD MORGAN AND S. H. REYNOLDS.—"The Field Relations of the Carboniferous Volcanic Rocks of Somerset," Brist. Nat. Soc. Proc. New (3rd) Series, vol. x, p. 188.

16.—1905. W. H. WICKES.—"The Rhaetic Bone Beds," ibid. p. 213.

17.—1905. T. F. SIBLY.—"The Carboniferous Limestone of Burrington Combe," Brist. Nat. Soc. Proc., 4th series, vol. i, p. 14.

18.—1905. T. F. SIBLY.—"The Carboniferous Limestone of the Weston-super-Mare District (Somerset)," Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. lxi, p. 548.

19.—1905. A. VAUGHAN.—"The Palaeontological Sequence in the Carboniferous Limestone of the Bristol Area," Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lxi, p. 181.

20.—1906. T. F. SILBY.— " On the Carboniferous Limestone (Avonian) of the Mendip Area," Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lxii, p. 324.

21.—1906. A. VAUGHAN.—"The A.vonian of the Avon Gorge," Brist. Nat. Soc. Proc. 4th Series, vol. i, p. 74.

22.—1907. S. H. REYNOLDS.-" The Igneous Rocks of the Bristol District," Proc. Geol. Assoc. vol. xx, p. 59.

23.—1907. T. F. SIBLY.—"On the Carboniferous Limestone (Avonian) of Burrington Combe and Cheddar, ibid. p. 66.

24.—1907. A. VAUGHAN.—"Notes on the Coral Zones of the Avonian (Lower Carboniferous), ibid. p. 70.

25.—1907. "Report on Excursion to Bristol, Whitsuntide, 1907," ibid. p. 150.

26.—1908. "Report on Excursion to Mid and South Cotteswolds (part ii, Tortworth, &c.), ibid. p. 530.

27.—1908. F. R. C. REED AND S. H. REYNOLDS.—"The Fossiliferous Silurian Rocks of the Southern half of the Tortworth Inlier," Quart. Journ.Geol. Soc., vol. lxiv, p. 512.

28.—1908. W. H. WICKES.—"Pebble-swallowing Animals (a sequel to the Rhactic Bone Beds) Brit. Nat. Soc. Proc.. 4th series, vol. ii, pt. 1, p.5.

29.—1909. C. LLOYD MORGAN AND S. H. REYNOLDS.—"A Sketch of the Geological History of the Bristol District," ibid. pt. 2, p. 5.

30.—1909. A. VAUGHAN.—"Faunal succession in the Lower Carboniferous (Avonian) of tho British Isles," Rep. Brit. Assoc. (Winnipeg), p.188.

31.—1910. S. H. REYNOLDS. —"The Paleozoic Rocks of Gloucestershire and Somersetshire," " Geology in the Field," Jubilee Vol. Geol. Assoc., p. 308.

32.—1910. L. RICHARDSON. —"The Neczoic Rocks of Gloucestershire and Somersotshire," ibid. p. 329.

33):17-1.911. . S. H. REYNOLDS AND A. VAUGHAN. —"Faunal and Lithological Sequence in the Carboniferous Limestone (Avonian) of Burrington Coinhe (Somerset) " Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lxvii, p. 342.

34.—1912. M. B. CIHAPMAN—"The Chemical Examination of the Carboniferous Limestone of the Avon Gorge," Geol. Mag. N.S., Dec. 5, vol. ix, p. 498.

35.—1912. S. H. REYNOLDS.—"A Geological Excursion Handbook for the Bristol District."

36.—1916. S. H. REYNOLDS.—"Further work on the Igneous Rocks associated with the Carboniferous Limestone of the Bristol District," Quart.Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lxxii, p.