Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Professor Gregory's kindly review of the Carlisle memoir raises once more the vexed question of the structure of the New Red rocks of that district. Two borings, one at Abbey Town and the other at Bowness, prove a thick series of variegated shales in the drift-covered western part of the area. A third boring proved red beds beneath the Lias at Great Orton. As Professor Gregory points out, the correlation of these red beds with the Abbey Town shales is uncertain. Though expressing the same caution, he had nevertheless previously adopted the correlation, his section through Great Orton, here reproduced, showing the beds at the two places as continuous. In what follows it will be easy to distinguish the evidence relating to Great Orton from that dealing specifically with the Abbey Town shales.
page 201 note 1 “The Carlisle Basin”: Geol. Mag., 1926, pp. 377–9.Google Scholar
page 201 note 2 “The Solway Basin and its Permo-Triassic Sequence”: Geol. Mag., 1915, pp. 241–9.Google Scholar
page 201 note 3 For the sake of clarity this group is given the name by which it is known in the recently published memoir. Holmes called them Lower Gypseous Shales, and other writers, including Professor Gregory, have referred to them as Gypseous Shales.
page 205 note 1 “The Red Rocks of a deep Bore at the North End of the Isle of Man,” Trans. htst. Min. Eng., vol. lix, 1920, pp. 156–68.Google Scholar