Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
Montreal, August 4 1913.
With Raymond as guide started out to St. Martin Junction to see the Chazy. The beds are actually loaded with Byrrhina one or with opisth remains, and an abundance of Camarotrochia orientalis and C. plena. Hetutella borealis and H. imperata are also very common. Bothrionites americanus is not at all rare. The Chazy Limestone is a true highly crystalline limestone.
We then walked along the railway track to near the station near Parc LaVal where Malacostites munchiomi and Lijma-cystis emmersei are common in good specimens.
In the afternoon we collected around Mile End five miles N.E. of Montreal to see the Black River in dense cladded limestone, Raymond reported Louisville here but this is mostly in the clay.