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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
The series of beds containing graptolites in New Zealand occur in the Whakamarama district, which is situated in almost the extreme north-west of the South Island. They consist of intercalated bands of quartzite and carbonaceous argillites, with a north and south strike and dipping at a low angle to the west. As a result of the natural erosion of the land surface taking place more rapidly in the slaty layers than in the harder quartzites, the ridges and stream valleys exhibit a noticeable parallelism, those streams which enter the sea on the western coast usually taking a very sharp bend to the west, and with a somewhat gorgy channel to the sea. The valleys are for the most part densely clothed with forest trees, while the ridges of quartzite are barren, with the exception of a stunted growth of manuka (Leptospermum scoparium and L. ericoides), and in places a covering of peat to a depth of a few inches.
See paper by Mrs. E. M. R. Shakespear D.Sc. “On some New Zealand Graptolites”, Geol. Mag., Dec. V, Vol. V, April, 1908, pp. 145–8.
page 75 note 1 Bull. N.Z. Geol. Survey, 1907, No. 3.