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Fish Remains from the North Wales Coalfield
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
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AT certain levels in the Coal Measures of North Wales a flood of fish scales and bones occurs, to the exclusion of almost every other fossil; at others only an isolated scale or tooth is seen. The area appears to be especially rich in fish remains, though possibly this is due to inadequate collecting in other areas. A summary of the succession in the Flintshire and Denbighshire portions of the coalfield is shown in the diagram on p. 483, while the area dealt with is shown on the map (p. 482).
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1936
References
page 481 note 1 Hull, E., The Coalfields of Great Britain, 3rd ed. (1873), 8vo, London.Google Scholar
page 481 note 2 Wedd, C. B., and others, The Geology of Liverpool, 1923; The Geology of the Country around Flint, 1924; The Geology of the Country around Wrexham, 1927.Google Scholar
page 481 note 3 Simpson, H. H., “The Fish Bed in the Denbighshire Coalfield.” Geol. Mag., LXX, 1933, 275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 481 note 4 Simpson, H. H., “Note on the Fishes of the Ruabon Marl,” Geol. Mag., LXXI, 1934, 280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 484 note 1 Pruvost, P., “La Faune continentale du Terrain Houiller de la Belgique,” Mem. Mus. Boy. Hist. Nat. Belg., 44, 1930, 105.Google Scholar
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