Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
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Transcription
Thursday Sep. 13 - 1934
the Old. schists and finally the overtn signaling to
Lilurium and thence to Childs Head to see two
pillar larae of the earliest Lilurian. Have a
juice of the more popular type, usually the
lara's are five paired.
Thence Q.E. Chaff to Q.E. of Superbalf Out (if
lara) to see the Lilurian and its fruits. All in very
correct natural. Saw demistheria and branching hippo-
gra, demisterie Favae, Finestella, Christian
extremas, and payments of lingers of sulents.
Have taken true fruit. They are labeled about 2
miles N.E. of An olt'm Landing.
then north to the Glenhorn Inn of Thurl-
more Landing.
In the afternoon we gotlizzed immediately to
the Q.W. of the Inn. First to see the Tules lrocian
glays and small angular rocks of qts. slate and
lara in sizes up to 2' or more across. These series
occur irregularly. Over it is deposited the local engl.
Lilurian with batters of the older rocks 15' and
more thick and of general distribution. Then WOO