In transcribing the following passage from Smith’s text, I have begun with the rough OCR material provided by the Internet Archive and then collated it with the Internet Archive’s page images. If you spot any errors, please notify the webmaster. —  George P. Landow

This stratum is frequently so blended with the one above, in the slopes of the same hill in all the southern parts of its course, as not to be distinguished from it but in maps of a larger scale. It makes a redder, and, generally, a better soil, thah that of the upper oolyte, and in Oxfordshire, Northamptonshire, and Rutland, is widely detached from the other rock, lying only on the tops of the hills, and about Northampton and other parts becomes very brown and sandy.

In Rutland the surface of the oolyte rocks has much the appearance of the Cotswold hills, and their northern course through Lincolnshire forms a very long and narrow straight ridge, which has a singular opening in it at Lincoln. [46-47]

Related material

Bibliography

Smith, William. A Memoir to the Map and Delineation of Strata of England and Wales. London: John Cary, 1815.


Created 11 September 2018