FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   >>  
alley, and but a little way above the present bed of the Severn, proves how much more recently the arm of the sea, known as the Severn Sraits, must have been succeeded by the river. The best places for collecting these remains along the railway will be found to be in embankments and cuttings near Buildwas and Coalbrookdale, the latter having yielded as many as twenty-two distinct species. In cuttings along the railway, and in their immediate vicinity, will also be found sections of rocks, from the variegated marls of the New Red Sandstone, of the Mesozoic, to the silurians, of the Palaeozoic, or Primary Formations. The coal measures of Coalbrookdale, with their alternating beds of coal, clay, and iron ore, are rich in specimens of the fauna and flora of the carboniferous age; the best places for discovering them being the spoil banks of the mines, where shale, and ironstone nodules, will be found the most productive. One of the richest beds yielding fossils is the Penneystone, which may be seen on the surface near Coalbrookdale and Ketley; remains of the Megalicthys, Gyracanthus, and Holoptychus being occasionally found there, whilst Conularias, Nautili, Spirifers aviculus, Bellerophons, and others are numerous. The sand rock overlying it contains Calamites, Lepidodendrons, Ulodendrons, Sigillarias, &c., &c. Benthall Edge and Lincoln Hill yield characteristic fossils of the Wenlock limestone and Wenlock shales in great numbers and variety, corals being most abundant. Between the Severn and the Acton Burnell hills fossils of the Caradoc may be found in drift, in old walls by the wayside, and in strata dipping praidly beneath the Wenlock shales. BOTANY OF THE DISTRICT. In shallow portions of the Severn, we have several varieties of the River Crowfoot (_Ranunculus fluitans_), which, with their long slender stems and pure white blossoms, form a conspicuous feature; also the Canadian Water-weed (_Anacharis alsinastrum_), which has found its way as high up as Shrewsbury. In marshy flats bordering on the river, are found the Yellow Flag (_Iris pseud-acorus_), the Water-dock, (_Rumex Hydrolapathum_), the Water Drop-wort, Soap-wort, Frog-bit-water-lily, and the creeping Yellow Cress; whilst the little Lily of the Valley, the Giant Bell-flower, the Spreading Bell-flower, the rare Reed Fescue-grass, and the tall, handsome Fox-glove, which, "On fair Flora's hand is worn," adorn the woods along the slopes.
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   >>  



Top keywords:

Severn

 

Coalbrookdale

 

fossils

 

Wenlock

 

whilst

 
shales
 

cuttings

 

railway

 
Yellow
 

remains


flower

 

places

 

portions

 
DISTRICT
 

shallow

 
fluitans
 

slender

 

Ranunculus

 
Crowfoot
 

varieties


BOTANY

 

strata

 

variety

 

corals

 

abundant

 

Between

 

numbers

 

characteristic

 
slopes
 

limestone


Burnell

 
wayside
 

dipping

 

praidly

 

Caradoc

 

beneath

 

conspicuous

 

Fescue

 

Hydrolapathum

 

acorus


Valley

 

Spreading

 

creeping

 
Anacharis
 

alsinastrum

 

Canadian

 
blossoms
 
feature
 

Shrewsbury

 

marshy