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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
That the latest movement of the south-east of England has been one of depression is evidenced by the numerous “submerged forests” which occur at intervals round the coast, ranging downwards, not only to half-tide level, but to beyond the lowest ebb; and therefore not explicable merely on the hypothesis of sheltering sandbars, or lines of dunes, even where such can be shown to have existed.
1 Read before the Colchester Natural History Society, Oct. 5, 1876.