Page:The South Staffordshire Coalfield - Joseph Beete Jukes - 1859.djvu/19

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Although not strictly lying within the district. I mention this formation because its existence in Staffordshire was first discovered during the survey of the coal-field, and because it may have a rather important bearing on some of the theoretical results arrived at. It occurs on the high ground of Needwood forest. It consists of alternations of blue shale and limestone, the bands of limestone being not more than 6 or 8 inches in thickness, over which are some arenaceous beds becoming in the upper part a white shaly sandstone. The limestone bands have not yet been worked, but they would probably have the same hydraulic character as those of Barrow-upon-Soar. My colleague Mr. Howell, however, who mapped this neighbourhood, informs me that the limestone here is more argillaceous, and not so pure as the Lias limestone of other places, that near Stratford-on-Avon for instance. In the sandy beds are some imperfect casts of bivalve shells.

 

Since the publication of the first edition of this Memoir, the New red sandstone of the midland counties has been thoroughly surveyed, and its several parts analysed much more completely than before.

This has been done chiefly by the labours of Messrs. E. Hull and H. H. Howell, under the direction of Professor Ramsay, who now supplies the following abstract of the results which have been arrived at, in the passages included within inverted commas.

"The New red sandstone around the South Staffordshire coalfield consists of the following subdivisions:-—

