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III.—Land Shells in the Red Crag

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

Perhaps very few Tertiary formations have received a greater amount of attention from geologists and collectors of fossils, during the last forty years, than the Red Crag of Suffolk and Walton-Naze; and it seems singular that so few traces of land life have resulted from so much research. Although in its southern portions it is strictly a marine deposit, yet its distance from shore could not have been very great at any point; but putting aside the few plants and mammalian remains, most of which in the coprolite portion of the Red Crag are derivative, there is little evidence of its proximity.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1884

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