Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
In submitting the following paper to the readers of the GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE, I am conscious that some apology is needed for entering upon so difficult a subject. My position is as follows:—In 1879 the late Mr. E. B. Tawney joined me in the investigation of a series of detached blocks trawled from time to time by the Brixham fishermen. The character of certain of these stones having suggested to Mr. Tawney the idea that the schists of South Devon might possibly be of pre-Cambrian age, he visited the district in 1880, with the expectation of being the first to advance that hypothesis. The evidence of the schists themselves failed to satisfy Mr. Tawney on the point in question, and his premature death prevented his attacking the problem on a subsequent occasion, as he had hoped to be able to do.
page 241 note 1 Trans. Assoc, Devon. vol. xxi. p. 468.Google Scholar
page 243 note 1 Plate VI. Fig. 3.
page 243 note 2 Plate VI. Fig. 4.
page 244 note 1 Plate VI. Fig. 2.
page 244 note 2 Plate VI. Fig. 1.
page 244 note 3 Plate VI. Fig. 2.
page 245 note 1 Appendix, Slide No. 3.
page 245 note 2 Appendix, Slide No. 8.