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X.—On the Sequence of the Inferior Oolite Deposits at Bredon Hill, Worcestershire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
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The correct sequence of the Inferior Oolite deposits at this locality has always been a matter of uncertainty. This is due partly to the disturbed state of the oolite, partly to the scarcity of fossils. On Bredon Hill only the four lowest subdivisions of the Inferior Oolite series are preserved. In the Cotteswold Hills around Cheltenham they are, in descending order, the Lower Freestone, Pea - grit, Lower Limestone, and sandy beds characterized by a very distinctive ammonite, Tmetoceras scissum — the last being the sandy ferruginous limestones of Witchell. Professor Hull did not recognize the Pea-grit at Bredon, but stated that its most northern extension was at Notting Hill. In 1863, however, Dr. Holl rectified this error, and remarked that its non-existence here was only true as regards its pisolitic structure. Above Elmley Lodge that author noticed masses of limestone crowded with fragments of the spines and plates of Echinoderms, as well as numerous specimens of Bryozoa, and Terebratula plicata. Below the brow of the eastern extremity of the hill, above Ashton-under-Hill, Dr. Holl obtained Rhynchonella cynocephala in blocks of hard limestone, but was unable to find the bed in sitû or to offer any suggestion as to its probable stratigraphical position.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1902
References
page 513 note 1 Mem. Geol. Surv.: “Geology of the Country around Cheltenham” (1857), p. 33. Notting Hill is locally known as Nottingham Hill.Google Scholar
page 513 note 2 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xix (1863), p. 315.Google Scholar