The Ancient Life History of the Earth eBook

Henry Alleyne Nicholson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 483 pages of information about The Ancient Life History of the Earth.

The Ancient Life History of the Earth eBook

Henry Alleyne Nicholson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 483 pages of information about The Ancient Life History of the Earth.
of D’Orbigny) sometimes attains a thickness of as much as 600 feet, and consists of a great series of bluish or greyish laminated clays, alternating with thin bands of blue or grey limestone—­the whole, when seen in quarries or cliffs from a little distance, assuming a characteristically striped and banded appearance.  By means of particular species of Ammonites, taken along with other fossils which are confined to particular zones, the Lower Lias may be subdivided into several well-marked horizons.  The Middle Lias, or Marlstone Series (Terrain Liasien of D’Orbigny), may reach a thickness of 200 feet, and consists of sands, arenaceous marls, and argillaceous limestones, sometimes with ferruginous beds.  The Upper Lias (Terrain Toarcien of D’Orbigny) attains a thickness of 300 feet, and consists principally of shales below, passing upwards into arenaceous strata.

II.  THE LOWER OOLITES.—­Above the Lias comes a complex series of partly arenaceous and argillaceous, but principally calcareous strata, of which the following are the more important groups:  a, The Inferior Oolite (Terrain Bajocien of D’Orbigny), consisting of more than 200 feet of oolitic limestones, sometimes more or less sandy; b, The Fuller’s Earth, a series of shales, clays, and marls, about 120 feet in thickness; c, The Great Oolite or Bath Oolite (Terrain Bathonien of D’Orbigny), consisting principally of oolitic limestones, and attaining a thickness of about 130 feet.  The well-known “Stonesfield Slates” belong to this horizon; and the locally developed “Bradford Clay,” “Corn brash,” and “Forest-marble” may be regarded as constituting the summit of this group.

III.  THE MIDDLE OOLITES.—­The central portion of the Jurassic series of Britain is formed by a great argillaceous deposit, capped by calcareous strata, as follows:  a, The Oxford Clay (Terrain Callovien and Terrain Oxfordien of D’Orbigny), consisting of dark-coloured laminated clays, sometimes reaching a thickness of 700 feet, and in places having its lower portion developed into a hard calcareous sandstone ("Kelloway Rock"); b, The Coral-Rag (Terrain Corallien of D’Orbigny, “Nerinean Limestone” of the Jura, “Diceras Limestone” of the Alps), consisting, when typically developed, of a central mass of oolitic limestone, underlaid and surmounted by calcareous grits.

IV.  THE UPPER OOLITES.—­a, The base of the Upper Oolites of Britain is constituted by a great thickness (600 feet or more) of laminated, sometimes carbonaceous or bituminous clays, which are known as the Kimmeridge Clay (Terrain Kimmeridgien of D’Orbigny); b, The Portland Beds (Terrain Portlandien of D’Orbigny) succeed the Kimmeridge clay, and consist inferiorly of sandy beds surmounted by oolitic limestones ("Portland Stone"), the whole series attaining a thickness of 150 feet or more, and containing marine fossils; c,

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The Ancient Life History of the Earth from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.