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IV.—The Blown Sands and Associated Deposits of Towan Head, near Newquay, Cornwall
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
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At Towan Head and in the cliffs of Fistral Bay, near Newquay, there is seen, at a few feet above high-water mark, the remains of the Pleistocene Raised Beach. This consists of pebbly beds associated with ancient blown sands, sometimes of considerable thickness. Above this series of deposits comes the Head or Rubble Drift, formed during a greater elevation of the land. These beds have been fully described by many authors—De la Beche, W. A. E. Ussher, Sir Joseph Prestwich, and others. While capping the Head and Raised Beach, and on the top of the cliff, there is a series of more recent Æolian sandy beds.
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References
page 19 note 01 Godwin-Austen, R. A. C.: Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., 1850, vol. vi, p. 94Google Scholar; 1851, vol vii, pp. 121–126.
page 19 note 02 H. T. de la Beche: “Report on the Geology of Cornwall”, etc., 1839, p. 426, etc.
page 19 note 03 Ussher, W. A. E., “The Post-Tertiary Geology of Cornwall”: GEOL. MAG., 1879, Dec. II, Vol. VI, pp. 206–207.Google Scholar
page 19 note 04 Prestwich, J.: Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., 1892, vol. xlviii, pp. 281–282.Google Scholar
page 19 note 05 GEOL. MAG., 1879, p. 206.
page 20 note 01 Kennard, A. Santer & Woodward, B. B.: Proe. Geol. Assoc., 1901. vol. xvii p. 247.Google Scholar
page 23 note 01 They were probably situated further out to sea than the pebble beds of the bay, and so have been destroyed.
page 24 note 01 Bate, C. Spence: Trans. Devon Assoc., 1864, vol. i, pp. 138–139; Report Brit. Assoc., 1864, p. 88.Google Scholar Bullen, R. Ashington The Rev.: “Harlyn Bay and the Discoveries of its Prehistoric Remains” London, 1902.Google Scholar
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