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V. Notes on Charnwood forest
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
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In the midst of a comparatively tame and highly cultivated plain of New Red Sandstone near the centre of England, there rises up a part of the under crust of the earth which presents so much the appearance of an island as to lead the imagination at once to those remote ages when its porphyritic Peaks and Syenitic Knolls were surrounded by the sea. The geological history of this celebrated spot has been skilfully unravelled by Professors Sedgwick and Jukes (Article in Potters's Charnwood Forest); the Rev. W. H. Coleman (Article in White'Directory); Mr. Edward Hull (Memoirs of Geol. Survey); and others.
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References
page 498 note * Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxi. No. 81, p. 72.Google Scholar
page 498 note † Apparent traces or impressions of vegetable or animal life have been discovered in the Southland slate-quarries on the eastern side of the Forest.
page 499 note * Had these igneous rocks anything to do with the anticlinal upthrow, which Mr. Hull and others believe to have occurred at the close of the Carboniferous period, or are they of much older date ?
page 499 note † Too much importance cannot be attached to the examination of fresh excavations in the quarries of Markfield Knoll, Groby, & c, in order to discover, if possible, the actual contact of the igneous and sedimentary rocks.
page 499 note ‡ See Prof. Eamsay on North Wales, in the first volume of ‘ The Geologist.’
page 499 note § In one of the neighbouring Snibston pits it was found to be 21 feet in thickness. In two of the Whitwick shafts its thickness is 63 feet.