Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
In the Summer of 1900 the present writer on a visit to Newquay casually observed a deposit containing land shells near the Lifeboat House by Towan Head. The description of the little section was included in a joint paper by Mr. A. S. Kennard and himself on the “Post-Pliocene Non-marine Mollusca of the South of England” and fortunately assigned in error to the Pleistocene period.
page 10 note 1 Proc. Geol. Assoc., vol. xvii (1901), p. 247.Google Scholar
page 10 note 2 Geol. Mag., 1903, pp. 19–25.
page 11 note 1 Geol. Mag., 1879, pp. 206–7.
page 11 note 2 The terms for these beds in what may be styled the pre-glacial days of the Geological Survey seems to have been “Extraneous Rubbish” (“History of the Geological Society,” p. 134).
page 11 note 3 Geology of the Country near Newquay (Geol. Surv. Mem., Sheet 346), p. 67, pl. v.
page 12 note 1 Trans. Roy. Geol. Soc. Cornwall, vol. iv (1832), pp. 468–9.Google Scholar
page 13 note 1 Trans. Roy. Geol. Soc. Cornwall, vol. vii (1848), p. 50.Google Scholar