Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
II. (8) Kent.—1862. Mr. W. H. Bensted, in the Geologist, vol. v (1862), pp. 449, 450, states: “The Druid Sandstone, of which Kit's Coty House, Stonehenge, and many other Druidical remains are composed, is found scattered in great blocks over the surface of the Chalk Hills, or buried superficially in beds of clay retained in the hollows on the summits of the escarpments.” These stones, he added, are the same as the Greywethers of Berks and Wilts; and are occasionally pebbly, like the Hertfordshire Puddingstones.
page 116 note 1 See also Lieut.-Col. Nicolls on “Sarsens,” Southampton, 1866: Geol. Mag., Vol. III, pp. 296–298, Pl. XIII.Google Scholar
page 119 note 1 Referred to at p. 149 of pt. i, 1886.