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IV.—On the South-Eastern Coalfield1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

The discovery of a coalfield in 1890 at Dover, in a boring at the foot of Shakespeare Cliff, has been already brought before the British Association by the author at Cardiff in 1892, and is so well known that it is unnecessary to enter into details other than the following. The Carboniferous shales and sandstones contain twelve seams of coal, amounting to a total thickness of 23 feet 5 inches. These occur at a depth of 1,100 feet 6 inches below Ordnance datum, and have been penetrated to a depth of 1,064 feet 6 inches, or 2,177 feet 6 inches from the surface. They are identical, as I have shown elsewhere, with the rich and valuable coalfields of Somersetshire on the west, and of France and Belgium on the east

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1899

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Footnotes

1

A paper read before Section C (Geology), British Association, Dover Meeting, September, 1899.

References

page 501 note 2 Proc. Royal Inst., June 6, 1890. Trims. Manchester Geol. Soc, xxii, Feb. 2, 1894; xxv, Feb. 9, 1897.

page 503 note 1 Brit. Assoc. Bristol Meeting, 1898.

page 503 note 2 “The Probable Range ot the Coal-measures in Southern England”: Trans. Federated Institution of Mining Engineers, vol. vi, map.