Field Notebook: New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Quebec 1905
Page 130
Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. | www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
These humors plainly show that the burning was done to provide a logan hole as the humors are ever merging in sweep and that the habitation hole is in the paring. The paelling should therefore be towards the center. The question arises did one animal make these conformed, circular, circular corks-tails. From the fact that most of the impressions consist of one or two holes I rather think that there where done in the previous page was made by a colony of six individuals. A hunting through one of these specimens one sees that these jars are all separate and on one another but that thin is but one thickness. The lithologic character of these holes including the can-do-palli and an the hummor as it is seen at Mt. Joli that there is not in the prints we would say, are identical beds. The prints known are totally different in these beds are those of Mt. Joli.