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Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
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Transcription
August 19-1929 continued.
In 1930 we saw that there are austral Bonaventure
Here the Barke cnyl. are practically horizontal, mostly
CNYL. on the gentle inner low angular and could be
called a brecia. The sandstones that are tinted did are
irregular in deposition, and have much caliche-like
gives the equivalent of what we saw to the north of the
Grand Coupee along Calvary that is called the circular beds
also having some Venetian. Have a piece of the caliche, a
red ss piece and a cnyl example.
These types of strata continue NW to Barachois
and traverse the railroad bridge over the creek.
Farther NW along to Boileraud one sees lots of the
regulating barke SS, green and red marls, and some cnyl.
grss. Have four samples taken in front of the Post Office of
Barachois Parish. As that is here no other kind of Bona-
venture and as these cnyl. fan into barke ss here as on the
castom side of St. Peter peninsula, it is clear that all of
these strata are nothing other than the lighter Barke SS series.
The fault folding indicates we did not see, but small
meccyffe present in the area or t'harred by us.
On to Boileraud 3-4 miles (north) of the Carre we
saw Richmond ls very crystalline and with my smacoclite.
It had no lons but clear felsp in the Richmond series.
[This is the splitting middle kind if or tel. mmpy from cnyl carr. 1938]
At about noon are stopped at Miss Couture Trading
house at Cape Core to see young Cecil Kindle. Here we
also had lunch.