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n the upper surface of the Greenfield slab. These marks are represented by parallel curves, or straight lines, distant from each other from half an inch to an inch, and presenting a slight degree of prominence. There is another form of ripple-marks(?), differing from those above described. These are of a circular and mammillary form: they are strewed thickly, like little islets, approximating to each other. They are seen distinctly on one of the slabs of the Brontozoum Sillimanium, on that of the AEthyopus Lyellianus, and some others. Whether they are to be considered as accumulations of sand and clay, formed by the action of the sea, we are uncertain; but there seems to be no other cause to which they can be assigned with so great probability. 3. _Coprolites_, the fossilized ejections of animals, are intermixed with other animal vestiges in the sandstone of Connecticut River, and afford additional proof of the former existence of animals about these rocks. * * * * * The latest accounts of fossil footprints we have had occasion to notice are those of the Crustacea, already mentioned, as found in Canada, and of the Chelonian in Scotland. The Canadian impressions, called by Professor Owen Protichnites, were discovered in the year 1847, and were laid before the London Geological Society in 1851. The most remarkable circumstance about them was their existence, as already stated, in a white sandstone, near the banks of the River St. Lawrence, at Beauharnais. This sandstone, which has been described by New York geologists under the name of Potsdam, is thought to belong to the Silurian system, and to have a higher antiquity than even the "old red." The Scotch footsteps are situated in the old red sandstone, and are those of a Chelonian. So that we have now two series of tracks, the Crustacea in Canada and the Chelonian in Scotland, of higher antiquity than any which had been previously discovered. * * * * * On a review of the labors of President Hitchcock, we are struck with admiration at the immense details that, in the midst of arduous official and literary duties, he has been able to go through with in the period since the foot-tracks were discovered on Connecticut River. Although his labors should be modified by succeeding observers, Science must be ever grateful to him for laying the foundation, and doing so much for the completion, of a work so g
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