Field Notebook: Newfoundland, Nova Scotia 1910
Page 80
Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. | www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
dlimites that have no fruits. Out of the finely crushed we could get at least ten species of fruits but all are or porn as to be unidentifiable. Dis is here - 13 Wt (8.2) "L" zone 11. 104 feet. A series of leary boded finely light-blue magnesian lime- stones. Near the base reem abundantly large Hormotoma, and Ormoceras. We also saw the common Orachura, Lependitia, many small ziphurelas of Endoceras, and rarely a Euryst. Ormoceras and the large Hormotoma go throughout Richardson's lithic definition is all away. At the top I gone to saw one slab with several specimens of the cephalopod feeding candida-falli like the cone shaped Anthrophyus "M" zone 1 (base of 12). In the field regarded as L. Same character of beds as before. Fruits not here as abundant and certainly not in good as Point Rick. Saw but a single specimen of the annulated range, Mr Esphingia here. In this these beds look very different from those of Point Rick. "L." zone 2, 96 feet. Same beds as before. Light blue to grey and nothing 'did did' about them as is stated by Richardson. "L" zone 3, 60 feet. The Lependitia beds. A series of leary boded finely light blue to grey magnesian limestones that are then down in yellowish thin boded scaly pieces, even ornamenting into their slabs. See one (Mr) F fruits, collected yesterday.