Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
The Summit of the hill, about two miles form the station, on the property of Arthur Peel, Esq., M.P., consists of yellow and brown sand, with much iron; and the harder beds of the latter, where they form a stone, are composed largely of small pebbles of quartz, sandstone, and mica. In these the phosphatic nodules are found. Generally they lie at a variable depth from the surface—in some cases cropping out; but, in others, they prevail at a greater depth, with a capping of soft sand from three to four feet, but none have been met with below six feet from the top.
1 The Farringdon Lower Green-sand contains many fossils, derived from the Kimmeridge clay.