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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Like many other geologists at the present time, I have been engaged in reading Mr. Clement Reid's Memoir on the Geology of the Country around Cromer—reading it, I may say, with mingled feelings of pleasure and pain;—pleasure, at the amount of interesting and valuable matter which he has assiduously unearthed; and dissatisfaction at his attempts to destroy one of the cherished convictions of childhood—faith in the Cromer Forest Bed! Mr. Reid evidently does not believe in the Cromer Forest Bed; but then what would a Manual of Geology be without it? This either he or his superior officers have felt, and the name “Forest Bed” has therefore been retained for a bed which, according to his own confession, “least deserves the name.” This course, though illogical, is no doubt a concession to popular geological prejudice.
page 222 note 1 Page 22.
page 222 note 2 See sections, pages 29 and 41.
page 222 note 3 Q. J. G. S. vol. xxxiv. p. 447.
page 222 note 4 Page 23.
page 223 note 1 Geol. Mag. 1878, p. 571—“Clay Boulders.”